Anonymous wrote:Some very dishonest people in this thread. She should go through the arduous process of taking an hours-long exam again (this time under tremendous pressure) because her score was flagged? If this was one of your precious white children, you would be suing everyone in sight. And I know this as an attorney who makes a good living filing lawsuits on behalf of spoiled rich people who I personally think I need to get lost. 99% of these are white people.
If this was my daughter, I would not allow her to retake the test. We would fight this and they could go ahead and produce the “evidence” of her “cheating.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT doesn't have that kind of content. It's a skills test more than a memorization test. If she brushes up on her skills a little bit, she should have no problem repeating the test with a similar score.
She cheated, though. Her missed answers matched against another student's missed answers.
Assuming this evidence is presented and convincing, and backed statistical analysis and seating charts, isn't it possible the other student cheated from her?
Anonymous wrote:And one more thing, none of you have seen ETS’s evidence of her alleged cheating. But you credit their claim immediately, right? Typical. The letter they sent her is a stock letter that most students of her background do not wherewithal to challenge.
Anonymous wrote:People act like once you study for a test, the information is in in your brain forever, so it should be no problem to retake the test. You know that's not the way it works for ANYONE. Asking her to retake it is asking her to redo all the hard work of studying again. She did that already. I'd be pissed if I had to deal that again.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure how this has become a racial issue. Do the students have to fill out what their race is when they take the SAT? Is her theory that the College Board flagged her because of her race?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What she's doing is taking way more of her time and energy than retaking the test.
Anyone who raised their score that much fair and square would be jumping to retake the test and prove to everyone that they earned it.
What she is doing would end this ridiculousness for everyone forever and is therefore very useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT doesn't have that kind of content. It's a skills test more than a memorization test. If she brushes up on her skills a little bit, she should have no problem repeating the test with a similar score.
She cheated, though. Her missed answers matched against another student's missed answers.
Assuming this evidence is presented and convincing, and backed statistical analysis and seating charts, isn't it possible the other student cheated from her?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The SAT doesn't have that kind of content. It's a skills test more than a memorization test. If she brushes up on her skills a little bit, she should have no problem repeating the test with a similar score.
She cheated, though. Her missed answers matched against another student's missed answers.
Assuming this evidence is presented and convincing, and backed statistical analysis and seating charts, isn't it possible the other student cheated from her?
Anonymous wrote:The SAT doesn't have that kind of content. It's a skills test more than a memorization test. If she brushes up on her skills a little bit, she should have no problem repeating the test with a similar score.
She cheated, though. Her missed answers matched against another student's missed answers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid’s score went up by 350 points (from a 1080 to a 1430) and they held the score and investigated her for cheating. But they didn’t find any evidence and released the score. They must have found something on this student.
This is my thought, too. My kid’s score was flagged after a very high jump, but was released after an investigation.
Anonymous wrote:My kid’s score went up by 350 points (from a 1080 to a 1430) and they held the score and investigated her for cheating. But they didn’t find any evidence and released the score. They must have found something on this student.