Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Even though many colleges aren’t mandating scores, at least one group of students are still sending them: wealthier ones. In the current application cycle for current high school seniors, 52% of students in the wealthiest households submitted scores this school year, according to data from the Common Application through February. Only 39% of the poorest did so. Applications among first-generation students -- those whose parents didn’t receive bachelor’s degrees -- grew by 21% from two years prior. Only 37% of underrepresented minorities sent in scores in 2021-22, compared to 52% of non-unrepresented minorities."
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-03-14/why-u-s-colleges-are-rethinking-standardized-tests-quicktake-l0qs606i
Wealthy households are taking standardized tests in greater numbers, probably with a lot of money spent on test prep. They still want the "advantage" that comes with maintaining the high stakes testing standard. However, Test Optional is changing the admissions game.
Or they are taking the test because they know test optional really isn't for them. Colleges are happy for first gen and URMs to be test optional because they can do what they want with less chance of lawsuits similar to the Harvard one. For other students, it's likely viewed as a red flag to not submit scores.
+1
It wasn’t really “optional” for my kid coming from a W school. It would have been a giant red flag. And since you are competing against your peers, if they’re all taking the test then you also need to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Even though many colleges aren’t mandating scores, at least one group of students are still sending them: wealthier ones. In the current application cycle for current high school seniors, 52% of students in the wealthiest households submitted scores this school year, according to data from the Common Application through February. Only 39% of the poorest did so. Applications among first-generation students -- those whose parents didn’t receive bachelor’s degrees -- grew by 21% from two years prior. Only 37% of underrepresented minorities sent in scores in 2021-22, compared to 52% of non-unrepresented minorities."
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-03-14/why-u-s-colleges-are-rethinking-standardized-tests-quicktake-l0qs606i
Wealthy households are taking standardized tests in greater numbers, probably with a lot of money spent on test prep. They still want the "advantage" that comes with maintaining the high stakes testing standard. However, Test Optional is changing the admissions game.
Or they are taking the test because they know test optional really isn't for them. Colleges are happy for first gen and URMs to be test optional because they can do what they want with less chance of lawsuits similar to the Harvard one. For other students, it's likely viewed as a red flag to not submit scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional sucks A**!!
Actually, test optional is working well. YOU might not like it, but colleges do.
This is what test optional produces. Boston College as an example:
"Having received the most undergraduate applications in its history this winter, Boston College is set to enroll a first-year class that furthers the University’s efforts to promote diversity as well as academic excellence, and provide higher-educational opportunities for underrepresented students, according to Director of Undergraduate Admission Grant Gosselin."
"Although BC, along with many other colleges and universities, was test-optional for the 2021-2022 admission cycle, 45 percent of applicants submitted test scores. The average SAT score among applicants is 1452, 33 for ACT.
Public high school students account for 62 percent of Class of 2026 applicants, while private and independent school applicants are 23 percent of the total, and students from Jesuit or Catholic high schools represent 15 percent."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional sucks A**!!
Actually, test optional is working well. YOU might not like it, but colleges do.
This is what test optional produces. Boston College as an example:
"Having received the most undergraduate applications in its history this winter, Boston College is set to enroll a first-year class that furthers the University’s efforts to promote diversity as well as academic excellence, and provide higher-educational opportunities for underrepresented students, according to Director of Undergraduate Admission Grant Gosselin."
"Although BC, along with many other colleges and universities, was test-optional for the 2021-2022 admission cycle, 45 percent of applicants submitted test scores. The average SAT score among applicants is 1452, 33 for ACT.
Public high school students account for 62 percent of Class of 2026 applicants, while private and independent school applicants are 23 percent of the total, and students from Jesuit or Catholic high schools represent 15 percent."
You write colleges "like" it. Colleges like that it allows them to admit the class they seek to admit. What they are finding, and will continue to research over the next few years, is how well prepared the admitted class is for the most rigorous colleges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional is a smokescreen to perpetuate admission discrimination and everyone knows it. Can’t wait for the Supreme Court to rule on these “holistic” policies. Low achievers love them but I hope everyone who supports test optional chooses a degree optional doctor for their next major surgery.
In a world of dumb points, this one is way up there. Are you currently asking your doctor for a standardized test score they took when they were 16? And using that as a proxy for their medical talent? You deserve the results of all your bad decisions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional is a smokescreen to perpetuate admission discrimination and everyone knows it. Can’t wait for the Supreme Court to rule on these “holistic” policies. Low achievers love them but I hope everyone who supports test optional chooses a degree optional doctor for their next major surgery.
In a world of dumb points, this one is way up there. Are you currently asking your doctor for a standardized test score they took when they were 16? And using that as a proxy for their medical talent? You deserve the results of all your bad decisions.
I absolutely check where my prospective doctors went to undergrad, med school and residency. I did this yesterday when looking for a rheumatologist, in fact.
They wouldn't get into Yale, Vanderbilt or Northwestern undergrad in the first place with a 21 ACT. So do I know their exact SAT? No, but I know they did undergrad at a top school and reasonable conclusions can be drawn about their "standardized test score when they were 16": it was high!
Do I know their MCAT? Still no -- but if that MCAT was shit, we can all agree that Stanford medical school wouldn't have selected them. And so on.
While we're on the topic, I also don't want the vision impaired pilot, the firefighter with no upper body strength who uses a cane, or the trial attorney with a profound speech apraxia.
Your point wasn't checking education but SAT/ACT scores - you realize that is what test optional is about, right? So in your context, if the school selects them, they should be good enough - what do you care what standard they use? U Chicago has been test optional since 2018, are you planning on eliminating all U Chicago undergrads from consideration?
If you judge doctors on the undergrad, then you've probably already seen a doctor who had a lower SAT/ACT test score than you probably deem appropriate. Plenty of students at Yale, Vanderbilt or Northwestern have always had mediocre scores but got in for legacy, athletics, donor, etc. You can't tell who they are now.
As for the other professions, are you checking where the pilot learned to fly? Or the quality of the training program for the firefighter? No, you aren't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional sucks A**!!
Actually, test optional is working well. YOU might not like it, but colleges do.
This is what test optional produces. Boston College as an example:
"Having received the most undergraduate applications in its history this winter, Boston College is set to enroll a first-year class that furthers the University’s efforts to promote diversity as well as academic excellence, and provide higher-educational opportunities for underrepresented students, according to Director of Undergraduate Admission Grant Gosselin."
"Although BC, along with many other colleges and universities, was test-optional for the 2021-2022 admission cycle, 45 percent of applicants submitted test scores. The average SAT score among applicants is 1452, 33 for ACT.
Public high school students account for 62 percent of Class of 2026 applicants, while private and independent school applicants are 23 percent of the total, and students from Jesuit or Catholic high schools represent 15 percent."
Anonymous wrote:It’s a shame that so many underprivileged students have been cheated out of a basic high school education but people who can’t get a 4 digit sat score probably shouldn’t go to college in the first place
In the most recent report for the class of 2021, the mean score was 1,112 for White students and 934 for Black students. (The overall mean score was 1,060.
Anonymous wrote:Test optional has created a monster. The reason kids have to apply to 15+ schools, because even with good grades, ECs, leadership, summer job throughout HS, and good test scores, still a crap shoot to get in because so many more kids applying.
Until there is a way to limit/rule out some students (which test scores used to do), this will continue.
Anonymous wrote:Strong correlation between test scores and general intelligence. It’s funny how the people who complain incessantly about standardized tests are inevitably low performers.
Anonymous wrote:Test optional is a smokescreen to perpetuate admission discrimination and everyone knows it. Can’t wait for the Supreme Court to rule on these “holistic” policies. Low achievers love them but I hope everyone who supports test optional chooses a degree optional doctor for their next major surgery.
Anonymous wrote:Test optional sucks A**!!
Anonymous wrote:Fuzzy science. Not even sure an 11 point percentage spread is statistically significant without seeing raw numbers. What constitutes “wealthiest” and “poorest” students? Nothing is defined.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Test optional is a smokescreen to perpetuate admission discrimination and everyone knows it. Can’t wait for the Supreme Court to rule on these “holistic” policies. Low achievers love them but I hope everyone who supports test optional chooses a degree optional doctor for their next major surgery.
In a world of dumb points, this one is way up there. Are you currently asking your doctor for a standardized test score they took when they were 16? And using that as a proxy for their medical talent? You deserve the results of all your bad decisions.
I absolutely check where my prospective doctors went to undergrad, med school and residency. I did this yesterday when looking for a rheumatologist, in fact.
They wouldn't get into Yale, Vanderbilt or Northwestern undergrad in the first place with a 21 ACT. So do I know their exact SAT? No, but I know they did undergrad at a top school and reasonable conclusions can be drawn about their "standardized test score when they were 16": it was high!
Do I know their MCAT? Still no -- but if that MCAT was shit, we can all agree that Stanford medical school wouldn't have selected them. And so on.
While we're on the topic, I also don't want the vision impaired pilot, the firefighter with no upper body strength who uses a cane, or the trial attorney with a profound speech apraxia.