The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Parents, be aware of college admission test changes

SAT change was walked back, but ACT unveiled a series of redesigns.

- Maureen Downey

Sometimes we forget the ACT and SAT are consumer products, competing for market share among college-bound high school students. To that end, makers of both college admissions tests announced changes this year aimed at making them more relevant.

The SAT rolled out and then walked back a new score it planned to assign students based on the adversity and inequality they faced in their

schools and neighborho­ods.

Announced in May, the hardship score met with widespread criticism, leading the College Board to drop the idea in August.

In the meantime, the ACT unveiled a series of redesigns beginning next fall that it hopes will entice more high school students to its four-part test. Each section — English, math, reading and science — earns a scaled score between 1 and 36 that contribute­s to a composite score, also scaled to 36.

Now the ACT will calculate and send colleges “super

scores,” which combine a student’s highest ACT scores across all testing dates. Many colleges already superscore, but now the ACT will automatica­lly derive a student’s highest possible ACT composite score based on all of his or her results.

In another change, students who take the ACT online will get their scores back in as soon as two days, rather than in 10 to 14 days for paper tests.

The ACT revision drawing the most chatter among par

ents and students will allow test-takers to retake individual test sections, rather than plodding through the entire threehour test, as they must do now to try to improve their score.

However, the retake option imposes a condition that bears discussion. Retakes of spe

cific sections must be digital. Most Georgia students take the paper versions of the SAT and ACT, as few host high schools are willing — or able — to provide computers to test-takers. But there is a push to expand online testing accessibil­ity.

Something for parents to consider is that evidence suggests that students, even those we regard as digital natives, score better on paperand-pencil tests than digital ones. Researcher­s for the American Institutes for Research examined two years of results (2015 and 2016) from statewide assessment­s in Massachuse­tts and found the students testing on paper scored higher than peers using computers.

That does not surprise Brian Eufinger, co-founder of the Atlanta-based tutoring company Edison Prep, which puts kids through full mock practice tests with all 215 questions across the four sections of the ACT.

“The number of kids who finish all 215 questions on their initial mock ACT paper test, before practicing, is approximat­ely 15%,” he said. When test-takers sit down to a mock digital ACT, Eufinger says, “almost none would get to all 215 questions.”

“We’ve asked our students in class if they would like the idea of taking the online ACT with the exact same timing structure, no extra time given for the fact that you can’t write on the test, have to redraw math diagrams and can’t annotate. Like clockwork, over 90% said that losing the ability to write on the actual booklet would kill their timing and said paper was their preference,” said Eufinger.

Also, Eufinger and other test tutors say there’s value to students retaking the entire ACT even if their goal, for example, is only to improve their math performanc­e. They just might register a bump in the reading or science section.

The beneficiar­ies of the new ACT policies will be kids with savvy parents aware of the choices and able to propel their kids through the prep to make retakes worthwhile.

“As a privileged, educated parent, well-versed in the high expectatio­ns surroundin­g elite college competitio­n, my immediate thought was, ‘Great, my son will get his wish of bringing up his one disappoint­ing — to him — ACT subtest,’” said Allyson Gevertz, a longtime education advocate in DeKalb County who is now a school board member. She has also worked as a school psychologi­st for Gwinnett County.

“Then my thoughts turned to what this would mean to the students of DeKalb who don’t have parents willing — and able — to entertain the notion of prepping for and retaking one section of the ACT. Because I now feel responsibi­lity for DeKalb students, as a school board member,” she said. “We already struggle to be sure students and parents are aware that seniors must complete their finals and End-of-Course Tests. Many students also need assistance with AP exams, as well as the PSAT, SAT and ACT. Thinking about all the testing decisions and options is already exhausting to me as a parent and a school board member. I can’t imagine what it is like for parents unfamiliar with the college admissions process.”

That admissions process will continue to prioritize test scores. Most selective schools, including Georgia Tech, the University of Georgia and Emory, require the SAT or ACT.

Even the University of Chicago, the most prestigiou­s campus to declare itself test optional, still states on its website, “We encourage students to take standardiz­ed tests like the SAT and ACT, and to share your scores with us if you think that they are reflective of your ability and potential. Given that many of our peers do require testing, we anticipate that the vast majority of students will continue to take tests and may still submit their test scores to UChicago.”

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 ?? AJC FILE PHOTO ?? Of upcoming changes to the ACT, the one likely to get most attention is the ability of students to retake sections they want to improve rather than the entire three-hour test, as now required.
AJC FILE PHOTO Of upcoming changes to the ACT, the one likely to get most attention is the ability of students to retake sections they want to improve rather than the entire three-hour test, as now required.

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