Los Angeles Times

Low-scoring but smart students

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Re “Put to the test, GPA and SATs may not tell all,” Dec. 22

If the playing field were level, the SAT and ACT would be good tests for college admission. But when kids are chronicall­y tired, too hungry, too sick or too unsafe, they cannot learn as well as others.

And they do not test well enough to show their intellectu­al potential in college.

UC Riverside sophomore Melissa MorfinAcev­edo, who performed poorly on the SAT but had a 4.1 high school GPA, is not only lucky, she is one of the rare super-driven young people who can push through the mess to beat the system.

The cost to the rest of us who lose those bright people is unfathomab­le.

The cuts to food stamps and other protection­s for the disadvanta­ged are cruel and ugly. These programs are not “charity.” We need the smartest kids for the future.

Michael Gross

Woodland Hills

Keep the SATs, but use the test results only to create a “normalizat­ion factor” for each high school.

A school with high grade inflation might earn a factor of 0.90, for example. A student from this school who had earned a 4.0 GPA would, for college admission purposes, get credit for only a 3.6 GPA.

With this system parents would most likely not spend money on SAT test preparatio­n, but the students would still be motivated to help their school receive the best normalizat­ion factor.

Joseph Beerer Glendale

Your article cherrypick­ed, presenting a somewhat biased view against standardiz­ed testing.

There are also students who do not have high GPAs but test well. No examples were given of them.

I was one such student, and I did not take test preparatio­n classes. I attended a lily-white suburban high school in the 1950s where I received a good education. Grade inflation was not prevalent back then. I was obliged to take a separate, college administra­ted exam to get into an engineerin­g school.

Upon entering, I was embarrasse­d to find that a prepondera­nce of my classmates came out of the top 5% of their high-school classes, many from lowerrated city schools. Many, unlike me, were study nerds who cared about their high school grades. They weren’t into sports of other social activities.

Upon completion, only two of seven of us who started in the program graduated. Many of the dropouts transferre­d to other fields, like business, but didn’t make it in engineerin­g.

I’m biased, but eliminatin­g SATs would preclude people like me from attending college. A balance is needed. David Ferrier

Brea

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