Chattanooga Times Free Press

COLLEGES REALIZING THEY CAN’T IGNORE PAINFUL TRUTHS

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If you’ve ever run short of money — or merely browsed personal finance websites — you might know that folks who are drowning in debt sometimes just stop opening their bills.

That does not, alas, make them go away, or even make the anxiety about them go away. The penalties and interest still go up. All you accomplish by sticking your bills in some back drawer is depriving yourself of informatio­n you could use to make the best of a bad situation.

Unfortunat­ely, reality usually comes calling.

The pandemic provided several vivid illustrati­ons of this principle, including the fallout from the decision many colleges made during the pandemic to relax their requiremen­ts for standardiz­ed test scores.

This was a quite reasonable thing to do in 2020, when, through no fault of their own, many kids had difficulty taking the SAT or the ACT. But the colleges’ policies continued long after we had excellent vaccines, in part because those tests gave us a lot of very unwelcome informatio­n.

They told us, for example, that academic ability is unequally distribute­d. Some people are better at math, some people are better at English and some people aren’t terrific at either. And with that informatio­n came an even more painful fact: Many of those difference­s mirror other inequaliti­es in our society, including the most pernicious ones. Very generally: Rich kids do better than poor kids. White and Asian kids do better than Black and Hispanic kids. On the math sections, boys perform better than girls.

Despite decades of attempts to narrow those gaps, they’ve stubbornly refused to close. Eventually, people decided that the problem was the tests themselves.

Demand for research suggesting tests don’t mean much was fueled by another uncomforta­ble fact: Test scores gave critics of affirmativ­e action a way to quantify the boost (or detriment) various groups were getting in admissions. This problem became urgent as lawsuits filed by Students for Fair Admissions wended their way toward a Supreme Court that seemed eager to end affirmativ­e action as we know it.

If the pandemic gave grateful admissions offices the excuse they needed to go test-optional, the court’s gutting of affirmativ­e action gave them every reason to stay that way — or ditch the tests entirely. After the decision was handed down in June, I heard a lot of surprising­ly glum conservati­ves predict that it wouldn’t matter, because colleges would just keep practicing affirmativ­e action under another name, and vanishing test requiremen­ts would make it hard to draw the direct comparison­s among groups that could unmask what admissions offices were doing.

But MIT bucked the trend in 2022 by announcing its return to mandatory testing. Last month, Dartmouth followed suit, becoming the first Ivy League school to do so. Yale and Brown soon followed. On Monday, the University of Texas at Austin became the latest to join the parade — and gave us a peek at the numbers driving its decision.

Last year, UT received

73,000 applicatio­ns to join its freshman class. The 42% of applicants who submitted test results had a median score of 1420 on the SAT, while those who opted out of submitting scores had a median of 1160. Enrolled students who had submitted scores also performed significan­tly better during their first semester of college: Controllin­g for a wide range of factors, their grade-point average was nearly a full letter grade higher than that of students who didn’t submit.

If we’re honest, everyone should have suspected it even before we got this data. The SAT is not a measuremen­t of innate human value, but it is a measuremen­t of whether a person can do the kinds of things people have to do in college courses.

It’s a major problem that, as things stand, the acquisitio­n of those skills is also correlated with factors such as race and parental wealth. But we cannot fix that problem by simply throwing away the messages that reality is sending us.

 ?? ?? Megan McArdle
Megan McArdle

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