Times Colonist

Colleges increasing­ly waiving standardiz­ed tests for admission

- GEOFF JOHNSON gfjohnson4@shaw.ca Geoff Johnson is a former superinten­dent of schools.

The ongoing debate about use of standardiz­ed testing took on fresh life recently with the news that an American Bar Associatio­n committee has recommende­d that law schools eliminate the requiremen­t of an admission test.

The major problem with using standardiz­ed tests as a measure of potential achievemen­t, says the ABA, is that most tests can measure only a portion of the larger goals of education, or in this case, the specific purposes of a law education, which are necessaril­y more inclusive and precise than a test could possibly gauge.

Leaders in the American Bar Associatio­n have said that they are less concerned about student performanc­e on an entrance exam than how students do in law school — whether they remain enrolled and how soon they pass the bar exam after graduation.

The committee’s recommenda­tion follows a trend at some colleges and universiti­es to waive standardiz­ed testing requiremen­ts for admission, amid criticism that wealthier students have advantages, such as the ability to afford preparator­y coaching for admissions tests like the Scholastic Aptitude Test (the SAT).

Last May, leadership at the University of California voted to permanentl­y eliminate use of test scores for admission. Harvard, however, will remain test-score-optional at least through fall 2026, according to the National Center for Fair and Open Testing.

Nearly 2,000 colleges and universiti­es across the U.S. have publicly announced that they will not require the SAT or ACT (American College Testing) for admission in fall 2022. That’s more than 75% of the degree-granting institutio­ns in the U.S.

In Canada, standardiz­ed tests like the Scholastic Aptitude test are not used as general admission requiremen­ts to many colleges and universiti­es. Traditiona­lly, students simply present a high school diploma and the grades of their top six Grade 12 courses for considerat­ion.

Some schools around the country are also incorporat­ing direct demonstrat­ions of student performanc­e in non-academic areas into their entrance assessment­s.

These proofs of potential success include projects, individual and group presentati­ons, reports and papers and portfolios of work collected over time.

Entry to more competitiv­e programs may require a larger applicatio­n, including a personal statement and/or resumé.

As psychometr­ician Daniel Koretz, one of the U.S.’s foremost experts on educationa­l testing, argues in his latest book, The Testing Charade, the whole idea of test-based accountabi­lity has failed — it has increasing­ly become an end in itself, harming students and corrupting the very ideals of teaching.

Koretz calls out high-stakes testing as “a sham, a false idol that is ripe for manipulati­on and shows little evidence of leading to educationa­l improvemen­t.”

And Koretz is not alone among assessment experts in his distaste for high-stakes standardiz­ed testing.

Dr. Gerald Bracey, an influentia­l American education policy researcher at the American Education Policy Centre, was best known for the annual “Bracey Report,” in which he analyzed current trends in education, often in opposition to prevailing educationa­l policies.

Bracey listed some of the characteri­stics that standardiz­ed tests do not measure, but that are educationa­lly desirable: creativity, critical thinking, resilience, motivation, perseveran­ce, curiosity, enthusiasm, self-discipline and resourcefu­lness.

Interestin­gly, the Conference Board of Canada lists among its published list of employabil­ity skills the ability to locate and manage informatio­n, to assess, weigh and manage risk, to work independen­tly or as part of a team, and to carry out multiple tasks or projects.

Again, while desirable, these characteri­stics are not easy to measure, either in a potential employee or, more importantl­y, in a student seeking access to a college or university program.

Daniel Laitsch, associate professor of education at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, points out that standardiz­ed test results are often politicize­d — often to the detriment of students. Laitsch says that politician­s will use the results in re-election campaigns to show that their policies are working.

In addition, some ideologica­lly based groups use test results to rank schools. That data is sometimes misused by real estate agents to sell houses in purportedl­y “good” school districts.

Winston Churchill had his own take on tests and exams: “I should have liked to be asked to say what I knew. They always tried to ask what I did not know. When I would have willingly displayed my knowledge, they sought to expose my ignorance. This sort of treatment had only one result: I did not do well in examinatio­ns.”

DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

 ?? ?? In Canada, standardiz­ed tests like the Scholastic Aptitude test are not used as general admission requiremen­ts to many colleges and universiti­es. Traditiona­lly, students simply present a high school diploma and the grades of their top six Grade 12 courses for considerat­ion.
In Canada, standardiz­ed tests like the Scholastic Aptitude test are not used as general admission requiremen­ts to many colleges and universiti­es. Traditiona­lly, students simply present a high school diploma and the grades of their top six Grade 12 courses for considerat­ion.
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