Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They should allow kids to take the test (SAT or ACT) only 2 times.
Or maximum 3 and see all scores from every sitting — no superscoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
Why can’t they add questions to their application process such as: did you use an SAT/ACT tutor? Some of these problems are not so difficult to solve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another one bites the dust.
+1. told you. All of the schools are caving. one by one
Anonymous wrote:Another one bites the dust.
Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
No different than getting a tutor to help boost grades; college counselor to help write college essays; private coaches to help become a D1 athlete.
+1000
PP is very one dimensional and stupid.
Test is the most fair measure at least.
Anonymous wrote:They should allow kids to take the test (SAT or ACT) only 2 times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
No different than getting a tutor to help boost grades; college counselor to help write college essays; private coaches to help become a D1 athlete.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
No different than getting a tutor to help boost grades; college counselor to help write college essays; private coaches to help become a D1 athlete.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certain schools will undoubtedly bring back standardized testing requirements but plenty of other colleges will remain test optional or test blind.
Dummies need somewhere to go.
Lower ranked schools are fearful of getting enough students so will remain TO.
There will be a chasm. Elite schools aren’t going to let other schools report higher test score averages when they are using only 25% of total accepted to achieve those averages and the elites are using 100% of students.[b]
Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
Anonymous wrote:The elephant in the room that nobody wants to acknowledge is paying for test prep. Affluent families who pay big money for someone to help their kids with test prep give their kids a huge advantage in this test required world. Until someone figures out how to normalize for that, the whole system is still going to be messed up - test optional, test required, or whatever else! Maybe scores should be reduced by 0.1 point for every dollar you pay for test prep (pay $1000 your score gets reduced 100 points) and require a legally binding agreement that if you lie about your costs you forfeit your acceptance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a shock. Like it or not AOs just can’t identify the kids with the 4.5 GPAs who deserve to be admitted from those that are the beneficiaries of rampant grade inflation.
Colleges are having to do too much in the way of remedial classes which is hurting their 4 and 6 year graduation numbers which impacts their rankings.
What makes matters worse is that today it isn’t that hard to score well on the SAT/ACT. Hopefully moving it online will restore some rigor to testing.
If it wasn’t hard to score well, then I assume more than 1% would score a 1530.