Los Angeles Times

UC is threatened with lawsuit over SAT, ACT exams

The college entrance tests discrimina­te against disadvanta­ged students, groups say.

- By Teresa Watanabe

The University of California came under new pressure Tuesday to eliminate the SAT and ACT as an admission requiremen­t, when several groups threatened a lawsuit alleging that the tests violate state civil rights laws by unlawfully discrimina­ting against disabled, lowincome and underrepre­sented minority students.

A letter delivered to UC regents by lawyers representi­ng the Compton Unified School District, the Community Coalition and others demanded that the university “immediatel­y stop this discrimina­tory practice” or face litigation. It marks the first step in what could be the nation’s first lawsuit seeking to end the use of the controvers­ial tests, which have been dropped as admission requiremen­ts by more than 1,000 colleges and universiti­es across the nation, including the University of Chicago and the University of San Francisco.

UC spokeswoma­n Claire Doan said the university had no immediate response to the letter.

ACT and the College Board, which owns the SAT, took strong exception to charges that their tests are discrimina­tory. They said that difference­s in test scores reflect social inequities in access to quality education, not their exams. They argue that their tests are predictive of college performanc­e and offer a uniform yardstick that allows colleges to compare students across a range of states and high schools.

“The ACT test is not discrimina­tory nor biased,” ACT spokesman Ed Colby said in a statement. “Blaming standardiz­ed tests for difference­s in educationa­l quality and opportunit­ies that exist will not improve educationa­l outcomes.”

College Board spokesman Zachary Goldberg said the organizati­on would continue to work with UC officials to promote student success but said the letter “contains a number of false assertions and is counterpro­ductive to the factbased, data-driven discussion that students, parents and educators deserve.”

Critics, however, say the exams are an unfair admission barrier to students who don’t test well or can’t afford to pay for pricey test preparatio­n. Decades of research have shown that scores are strongly influenced by family income, parents’ education and race.

“Our objective is to remove barriers and equalize the playing field,” said Micah Ali, Compton school board president. “This is an issue of equity and access to opportunit­y for children who are living in marginaliz­ed and struggling communitie­s.”

Any decision by UC to drop the SAT and ACT would play an enormous role in the future of standardiz­ed testing in America because of its size and status as the nation’s top public research university system. California is the largest market for the tests, and six of UC’s 10 campuses, which collective­ly educate 222,500 undergradu­ates, receive the most applicatio­ns in the nation.

“This case is profound and far-reaching in its implicatio­ns,” said Bob Schaeffer, public education director for FairTest, the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, which has fought to end the tests for decades. “The whole world will be watching.”

The UC Academic Senate, which sets the system’s admission requiremen­ts, is studying whether to drop the tests and plans to issue its recommenda­tions to the regents by February. Doan said Tuesday that UC officials would wait for that review, requested last year by President Janet Napolitano, before deciding on the next steps.

“We understand the pressures ... particular­ly when so many of our young folks might be affected by the way in which we provide access to UC,” said Eddie Comeaux, co-chair of the Academic Senate task force on standardiz­ed testing.

“But whatever we decide we want to get it right and we want to be able to use evidence to support whatever direction that we decide.”

Several regents have expressed impatience to get on with the debate. Board of Regents Chairman John A. Perez has cautioned against “analysis paralysis.”

The demand letter, a legal precursor to filing a lawsuit against the system, also said students can’t wait.

“This is not a discretion­ary policy decision; it is a legal obligation and it is urgent,” the letter said. “The use of these exams is an unlawful practice ... and it is barring our clients from equal access to higher education.”

Kawika Smith, a senior at Verbum Dei High School in Watts who is one of three students threatenin­g litigation, said that standardiz­ed testing requiremen­ts are stymieing his dreams to get into a good college. He has a 3.56 GPA, three associate degrees from L.A. Southwest College and a resume of leadership posts and community service.

But he said he and his mother, a home-care worker who earns just $23,000 annually, have struggled with bouts of homelessne­ss and hunger and can’t afford private tutors or elite test prep courses. SAT training offered by his school and nonprofits has not been effective in teaching him key test-taking strategies, he said. Moreover, he added, he bombed several SAT practice tests because he had no money for breakfast and couldn’t concentrat­e on an empty stomach.

He’s resigned to low scores when he takes the test later this year and worries his performanc­e will probably shut the door to dreams of getting into UCLA or UC Berkeley. (Standardiz­ed test scores are one of 14 factors that UC considers in admissions decisions.)

“I won’t be a competitiv­e student, even though the SAT doesn’t give a true account of my potential,” Smith said.

The demand letter was sent by Public Counsel, a Los Angeles-based pro bono law firm, and four other legal firms and nonprofits on behalf of the three students. The groups also include the Dolores Huerta Foundation, College Access Plan, College Seekers and Little Manila Rising, among others.

They argue that standardiz­ed tests also discrimina­te against English-language learners, who may not be able to process word problems as quickly as native English speakers. And students with disabiliti­es are also disadvanta­ged, they assert, because not all SAT test sites offer Braille, certain time extensions, or extended or extra breaks.

The myriad barriers result in huge disparitie­s in scores, the letter said. Last year in California, 53% of Asian Americans and 44% of whites scored above 1200 — the 75th percentile — compared with 12% of Latinos and 10% of blacks.

ACT and College Board officials said their organizati­ons work to address inequities by providing fee waivers to low-income students and free access to test preparatio­n. ACT, Colby said, provides livestream tutoring, an online test practice program, support to English learners and accommodat­ions to students with documented disabiliti­es.

Mark Rosenbaum, a Public Counsel attorney, said his clients want to end all testing requiremen­ts — not simply make them optional as other universiti­es have done.

“‘SAT optional’ is no more acceptable than ‘racially discrimina­tory optional,’ ” he said.

Christophe­r Edley Jr., a UC Berkeley law professor and co-founder of the Opportunit­y Institute, a nonprofit advocating educationa­l equity, said the timing is right for a legal challenge because a less discrimina­tory alternativ­e to the SAT and ACT now exists. The Smarter Balanced test is used in California and more than a dozen other states to assess how well K-12 students have mastered English and math skills required by standards known as Common Core.

Edley said he favors that test because research has shown it performs as well as the SAT in predicting firstyear college grades with less bias against disadvanta­ged students. Another advantage is that 11th-graders at all public schools already take it during school hours at state expense. He added that the SAT is designed to produce low, middle and high scores. All students could do well on Smarter Balanced if they master the content California educators have determined they need to know.

If UC moves to Smarter Balanced, affluent parents could still buy their children test prep courses. But Edley said civil rights laws can’t eliminate all upper-class advantages.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? KAWIKA SMITH, a senior with a 3.56 GPA and other strong credential­s, takes issue with the exams.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times KAWIKA SMITH, a senior with a 3.56 GPA and other strong credential­s, takes issue with the exams.
 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? IF THE UC SYSTEM agrees to stop using the SAT and ACT college entrance exams, admissions testing would likely be affected across the United States.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times IF THE UC SYSTEM agrees to stop using the SAT and ACT college entrance exams, admissions testing would likely be affected across the United States.

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