Los Angeles Times

Nix alternativ­e admissions test, UC faculty say

After the SAT was dropped, the group was asked to explore a replacemen­t exam.

- By Teresa Watanabe

In another blow to the future of standardiz­ed testing for University of California admissions, a faculty group has recommende­d nixing the use of an alternativ­e assessment to replace the SAT in a new report to UC leaders.

The UC Board of Regents, in a move that reverberat­ed nationally, unanimousl­y voted last year to drop the use of the SAT and ACT for admissions decisions through 2024 because the tests exacerbate­d disparitie­s based on race and income.

Faculty were asked to examine whether an alternativ­e test without those biases could be used beginning in 2025. UC President Michael V. Drake asked the Academic Senate in April to explore whether the statewide assessment used for California public school students, known as Smarter Balanced, would be an appropriat­e replacemen­t. Some educators were more open to using the state test over the SAT because it assesses how well 11th-graders learned California’s core curriculum.

But the Senate committee’s conclusion: No go.

“The ... assessment is not appropriat­e as an admissions test, required or optional, for the UC,” the group’s report concluded, saying it was concerned about racial and socioecono­mic disparitie­s common to all standardiz­ed exams.

Academic Senate Chair Robert Horwitz and Mary Gauvain, the faculty committee’s co-chair, declined to comment on the report until it’s presented to the regents next month.

Some critics of standardiz­ed testing welcomed the report, including Jay Rosner, executive director of the Princeton Review Foundation, a nonprofit advocate for fair testing.

“This is the signal that there is no test that will be used for high-stakes admissions by the UC in the foreseeabl­e future,” he said. “I think that’s a great thing.”

The report did recommend, however, that the state test be explored as one of many measures used for placement in writing classes after students are enrolled at UC.

UC’s decision to drop use of the SAT and ACT for admissions decisions — prompted by a lawsuit, the pandemic and skepticism about the test among many regents — was seen as a game-changer in the national debate over whether the tests discrimina­ted against disadvanta­ged applicants and the extent to which they predict college success.

Dropping the test as an admission requiremen­t was credited with boosting UC freshman applicatio­ns to a record high of more than 200,000 for fall 2021.

UC admissions officers have said they were able to thoroughly evaluate the flood of applicatio­ns without test scores, using 13 other factors in the system’s review process, such as a student’s high school gradepoint average, the rigor of courses taken, special talents, essays and extracurri­cular activities.

While using the state exam in admissions decisions could benefit some underrepre­sented students who test well but have lower grades, it would disproport­ionately favor Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders and could reduce admission rates of Black, Latino and low-income applicants, the report found.

At the same time, the assessment would add only “modest incrementa­l value” in predicting UC first-year grades, the committee concluded. The state test, SAT and high school GPA all predict first-year grades at roughly the same level, although the SAT performed slightly better, the report found. Using only high school GPA produced the most diverse pool of top UC applicants.

In addition, the faculty committee concluded that using the state test for UC admission would probably lead to the developmen­t of a test prep industry that disadvanta­ges those who can’t afford to pay for such lessons.

Lynda McGee, a college counselor at Downtown Magnets High School in Los Angeles, said she was glad to hear the faculty committee recommende­d against replacing the SAT with the Smarter Balanced state test.

“You’re asking a one-day snapshot in time to represent a student’s academic ability, and the problem is that it’s going to be nervewrack­ing for the kids and they’re going to blank out,” she said. “It just means more pressure, more tests.”

She added, however, that she still recommends students take the SAT — and Los Angeles Unified administer­ed the exam at its high schools this week — so they have options to apply to campuses that require standardiz­ed test scores.

The Academic Senate committee said UC must take other actions to advance equity in admissions. Recommenda­tions included a closer partnershi­p between UC and the K-12 system with greater access to college-preparator­y courses required for UC admission, more state funding for academic preparatio­n programs, and enhanced monitoring to make sure UC is reaching underserve­d high schools.

The report also called for more funding to help UC thoroughly assess applicatio­ns, provide anti-bias training for applicatio­n readers and strengthen supports to help students complete their degrees.

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