Los Angeles Times

UC weighs new admissions test

Two expert panels recommend modified state assessment, but only if it is optional.

- By Teresa Watanabe

Now that the University of California is permanentl­y phasing out the SAT, will another standardiz­ed test take its place as an admissions requiremen­t? The answer is no, if two expert panels have their way.

The UC Board of Regents unanimousl­y voted last year to eliminate the SAT and ACT — as more than 1,000 other colleges and universiti­es have done — amid decades of research showing test performanc­e is heavily inf luenced by race, income and parent education levels.

But the regents accepted a faculty recommenda­tion to explore whether a new UC test without those biases could be developed, saying it would have to be ready in time for fall 2025 applicants.

The UC panels, in their reports released Monday, said it was not feasible for UC to develop its own test because it would take too long and recommende­d that the university instead explore using a modified version of the state’s high school assessment — but only as an optional “data point” in comprehens­ive applicant reviews.

The report comes as UC applicatio­ns hit an all- time high this admissions season, drawing record numbers of Black and Latino students who expressed confidence submitting applicatio­ns without SAT and ACT scores.

The group of UC faculty, admissions directors, test

ing experts, and other educationa­l and community representa­tives focused on whether Smarter Balanced, the California assessment given annually to 11thgrader­s, could be retooled for UC use. Any use of a modified state test, however, should be optional and limited so as not to create the inequities and high- stakes pressures associated with the SAT and ACT, according to the recommenda­tion to UC President Michael V. Drake from a second panel.

Regents will consider the issue at their three- day virtual meeting next week.

Smarter Balanced has several advantages, the work group found. Research has shown that the state test is about as effective in predicting college success as the SAT and ACT, although it remained unclear whether it is less biased. The test is given free to public school students and assesses how well they have mastered what California educators have determined they should know, including not only academic content but also higher- order thinking and the problem- solving skills required in college.

Using the state test could better align UC with the K- 12 system, leading to better educationa­l preparatio­n for university work, the work group found.

Smarter Balanced “may provide a tool that affords more students from diverse background­s important opportunit­ies to show what they know and can do,” concluded experts from a separate steering committee that reviewed the work group’s report.

But members from both groups also expressed concerns about racial and ethnic disparitie­s in state test results. For instance, about 70% of students classified as Asian meet or exceed the 11th- grade standard for math compared with 45% of whites and 20% of Black and Latino students, the work group said.

“There are clear educationa­l inequities — e. g., resources, quality of teaching — across schools,” the report said. “Adequate funding and attention to ongoing forms of oppression in vulnerable communitie­s will be required.”

Other concerns raised about using Smarter Balanced for UC admissions included the possibilit­y of fueling a new market of private, for- profit test preparatio­n that would further exacerbate inequity. If the test became high- stakes, it could create a new source of stress for students. In addition, the test is not available to private school students or those who live in other countries and most other states.

As a result of such concerns, a majority of work group members opposed using Smarter Balanced test scores to select students for admission but supported exploring it for related purposes, such as validating GPA, providing context about the school’s educationa­l environmen­t or helping determine placement in freshman courses and summer preparatio­n programs.

The group said UC should work with the Smarter Balanced consortium and state education officials to analyze test items for bias and enact procedures to address any found. Otherwise, it said, UC should drop considerat­ion of Smarter Balanced and eliminate testing requiremen­ts for freshman admission entirely.

Some members, however, were concerned that barring all standardiz­ed exams could put students who test well but have lower GPAs at a disadvanta­ge. They noted that only about a quarter of underrepre­sented minorities who applied to UC were eligible for admission through high grades alone.

UC, along with twothirds of the nation’s fouryear colleges, suspended SAT and ACT testing requiremen­ts last year because the pandemic limited access to testing opportunit­ies. A state court subsequent­ly barred UC from allowing even optional testing for current high school seniors in an ongoing lawsuit involving the educationa­l rights of students with disabiliti­es.

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