Anonymous wrote:Entitled parents sending their kids to SAT prep courses perpetuates inequities and only serves to widen the racial achievement gap. Wealthier students have unfair access to test preparation resources overall, which leads to unearned higher scores. This only heightens unearned white privilege and diminished access to education for BIPOCs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want the US to align itself with the rest of the world and only consider academics. Test scores should be a lot more central to the applications than they are now.
Nobody’s stopping you from moving to South Korea or India for their superior high stakes test based education system.
Unless the PP is a citizen of those countries, there is actually something stopping them from moving to those countries.
But, even so, more and more universities here are moving to test required, for a reason.
Yeah, it’s really hard to sort through 60,000 identical applications.
“My kid is good at the test therefore it’s the best measure of talent”, sure thing boss.
It is. Only someone who doesn't score well would scoff at this essential truth.
Anonymous wrote:Woke up this morning to find the whole first page full of SAT. Wall to wall. It's nauseating.
Don't kids have better things to do?
TikTok dances, garage bands, or peaceful coups against cafeteria pizza?
We don't need more bubbles filled in with No. 2 pencils.
We need freedom ... freedom from test scores, freedom from AP courses, freedom from grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to use test scores than to hand out admission spots to jackasses who had their mommy start a fake charity (that is abandoned once the kid is admitted).
Don't forget about fake testing accommodations.
But taking the test six times and cherry picking the best results from different tests is still cool, right?
Anonymous wrote:There is about a 400 point difference in scores if you look solely at household income. Those in the top quartile score about 400 points higher than those in the bottom quartile.
Anonymous wrote:Woke up this morning to find the whole first page full of SAT. Wall to wall. It's nauseating.
Don't kids have better things to do?
TikTok dances, garage bands, or peaceful coups against cafeteria pizza?
We don't need more bubbles filled in with No. 2 pencils.
We need freedom ... freedom from test scores, freedom from AP courses, freedom from grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want the US to align itself with the rest of the world and only consider academics. Test scores should be a lot more central to the applications than they are now.
Nobody’s stopping you from moving to South Korea or India for their superior high stakes test based education system.
Unless the PP is a citizen of those countries, there is actually something stopping them from moving to those countries.
But, even so, more and more universities here are moving to test required, for a reason.
Yeah, it’s really hard to sort through 60,000 identical applications.
“My kid is good at the test therefore it’s the best measure of talent”, sure thing boss.
Anonymous wrote:MAGA youth should be farming and saving their farms. They should not waste money on college.
K-12 schooling should be made into K-14 schools for kids who do not go to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want the US to align itself with the rest of the world and only consider academics. Test scores should be a lot more central to the applications than they are now.
Nobody’s stopping you from moving to South Korea or India for their superior high stakes test based education system.
Unless the PP is a citizen of those countries, there is actually something stopping them from moving to those countries.
But, even so, more and more universities here are moving to test required, for a reason.
Yeah, it’s really hard to sort through 60,000 identical applications.
“My kid is good at the test therefore it’s the best measure of talent”, sure thing boss.
Anonymous wrote:Of the top 75 colleges, including SLACs, how many are test required?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m glad colleges are moving back toward requiring the testing. With all the ridiculous grade inflation going on, this can be a differentiator. Not a huge fan of the superscore approach because I think that leads to the problem you’ve identified.
I agree with you. But I would prefer state subject tests instead. Also, MCPS just changed their grading policy so some grade inflation could decrease.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want the US to align itself with the rest of the world and only consider academics. Test scores should be a lot more central to the applications than they are now.
Nobody’s stopping you from moving to South Korea or India for their superior high stakes test based education system.
Unless the PP is a citizen of those countries, there is actually something stopping them from moving to those countries.
But, even so, more and more universities here are moving to test required, for a reason.
Anonymous wrote:I’m glad colleges are moving back toward requiring the testing. With all the ridiculous grade inflation going on, this can be a differentiator. Not a huge fan of the superscore approach because I think that leads to the problem you’ve identified.