Los Angeles Times

Should UC dump the SAT?

- Arents and students

Pare understand­ably frustrated by the vagaries of college admissions, especially the advantages handed to wealthier applicants. Rich kids are more likely to attend high-achieving schools, obtain tutoring and coaching, and have parents whose legacy history at a college gives them a bump up in the process (or who, in rare cases, can usher their children into college by donating a few million dollars — or by hiring someone to falsify their offspring’s athletic or academic credential­s).

The SAT and a rival entrance exam, the ACT, were intended to level the college admissions process a bit by offering an objective test that would place all students, regardless of what school they attend, on the same footing. But it hasn’t exactly worked out that way. Private test prep has become a big business, with fees that often run into the thousands of dollars per student. More affluent students can also afford to take the test multiple times in search of higher scores. It’s no wonder that test scores are strongly correlated with family income.

That’s why the University of California, which has a public obligation to treat the state’s students fairly, is right to reexamine the tests and their role in the admissions process. Applicants to UC schools today are required to take one of the two tests, although there’s no minimum score they have to meet for admission. Some key questions to be asked are: How accurately do the tests predict future student success in UC’s rigorous academic programs? Should they be given less weight as an admissions factor? Discounted altogether? Made optional, as hundreds of colleges have already done? Are they indeed biased against students of color, low-income students, non-English speakers and students with disabiliti­es?

UC’s report on the subject is expected to be released in February.

This is serious work with high stakes; in fact, colleges across the nation are watching to see what UC does and many are likely to follow its lead. So it is important that the complex issues involved be carefully considered. However, the university was threatened this week with a lawsuit by the Compton Unified School District, the Community Coalition and several other organizati­ons demanding that it drop the tests as an admissions requiremen­t “immediatel­y.”

The university should take its time; the issues here are thorny. Is there no value at all to a standardiz­ed measuremen­t of applicants? At the very least, these tests act as a check against teachers who feel pressured to inflate grades. A college applicant whose report card shows straight A’s but whose SAT score is abysmal calls for a second look.

And just because UC considers standardiz­ed test scores as part of the process doesn’t mean they have to be a major determinan­t. They could be relegated to a smaller role in the process. But dumping the tests altogether is a big decision that shouldn’t be made instantly under threat of a lawsuit.

Among other things, UC needs to figure out how well the tests measure an applicant’s likelihood of future success in school — and then determine how important a factor that should be. Certainly, for students whose parents have shelled out for intensive test prep, a high score is unlikely to be a reliable barometer of college potential. But in other cases, students may score well and may indeed be well prepared for college because they’ve had advantages — they have gone to better-funded schools with more advanced courses, or done well because of an emphasis on reading at home. Maybe that means the tests are too unfair to be used; or maybe it is informatio­n UC still can use as long as it is kept in perspectiv­e.

At the same time, disadvanta­ged students might have developed other skills that aren’t measured by existing admissions criteria, such as by working during the school year, or by having overcome obstacles in their lives. Can this be factored in?

The subject-by-subject achievemen­t tests offered by the College Board have been mentioned as a possible substitute for the SAT and the ACT. Another proposal is to keep the tests but set a floor for scores; students who meet that baseline score would be considered ready for university studies. Anything higher wouldn’t make a difference.

But if that’s all that’s needed, UC might be better off using California’s annual standards test for 11th graders, which is free and closely linked to the state’s curriculum. This would ensure every California student is, by default, taking a college admissions test.

UC considered dropping the SAT about 15 years ago, questionin­g its validity as an aptitude test and criticizin­g its lack of emphasis on writing. In response, the College Board revamped the test and added an essay section that had little to do with college writing skills and was too easily coached, putting low-income students at an even greater disadvanta­ge.

Let’s hope UC does it right this time by not rushing the process and making factbased, academical­ly sound decisions.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States