From The New York Times: The Misguided War on the SAT
After the Covid pandemic made it difficult for high school students to take the SAT and ACT, dozens of selective colleges dropped their requirement that applicants do so. Colleges described the move as temporary, but nearly all have since stuck to a test-optional policy. It reflects a backlash against standardized tests that began long before the pandemic, and many people have hailed the change as a victory for equity in higher education.
Now, though, a growing number of experts and university administrators wonder whether the switch has been a mistake. Research has increasingly shown that standardized test scores contain real information, helping to predict college grades, chances of graduation and post-college success. Test scores are more reliable than high school grades, partly because of grade inflation in recent years.
Without test scores, admissions officers sometimes have a hard time distinguishing between applicants who are likely to do well at elite colleges and those who are likely to struggle. Researchers who have studied the issue say that test scores can be particularly helpful in identifying lower-income students and underrepresented minorities who will thrive. These students do not score as high on average as students from affluent communities or white and Asian students. But a solid score for a student from a less privileged background is often a sign of enormous potential.
So in other words, getting rid of the SAT makes it a lot easier to admit minorities in the desired ratio, i.e. percentage of population. So the admissions department will look really great for a while.
However the U will then have the issue on what to do with a bunch of students who should never have been admitted, and a lot of them will be minorities.Report
You know who has a heck of a lot more unrepayable college debt than college grads?
“Some College”.Report
NYT figuring out things that have been obvious to everyone for decades. What a scoop.Report
At least they’re bringing it up.Report
Keep in mind nearly half of white students at Harvard are legacy, i.e., they wouldn’t make the cut if it were just based on SAT scores.Report
Chip, this isn’t about Harvard.
This is about a hell of a lot more colleges and universities than Harvard. Dozens and dozens more.Report