Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

State leaders looking at alternativ­e to SAT focused on ‘Christian tradition’

- By Ana Ceballos and Sommer Brugal Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

As Gov. Ron DeSantis and Florida Republican leaders explore alternativ­es to the College Board’s AP classes and tests, top state officials have been meeting with the founder of an education-testing company supporters say is focused on the “great classical and Christian tradition.”

The Classic Learning Test, founded in 2015, is used primarily by private schools and home-schooling families and is rooted in the classical education model, which focuses on the “centrality of the Western tradition.”

The founder of the company, Jeremy Tate, said the test is meant to be an alternativ­e to the College Board-administer­ed SAT exam, which he says has become “increasing­ly ideologica­l” in part because it has “censored the entire Christian-Catholic intellectu­al tradition” and other “thinkers in the history of Western thought.”

As DeSantis’ feud with the College Board has intensifie­d over its AP African American studies course, Tate had several meetings in Tallahasse­e with Ray Rodrigues, the state university system’s chancellor, and legislator­s to see if the state can more broadly offer the Classic Learning Test to college-bound Florida high school students.

“We’re thrilled they like what we’re doing,” Tate said. “We’re talking to people in the administra­tion, again, really, almost every day right now.”

Specifical­ly, Tate said he is seeking to make the test an option for the taxpayer-funded Bright Futures Scholarshi­p program, which rewards Florida high school students based on academic achievemen­t. Students can use the scholarshi­p to help pay for a Florida-based college education. Currently, the scholarshi­p is tied only to the SAT and ACT test scores.

While DeSantis has not publicly singled out the Classic Learning Test as an alternativ­e to the College Board’s SAT, he has said he wants to seek out “other vendors” who can do it “better” than the SAT.

A top education official in his administra­tion has indicated his interest in the CLT test.

“Not only do we need to build anew by returning to the foundation­s of our democracy, but CLT also offers the opportunit­y for all our colleges & universiti­es to rightsize their priorities,” Florida Department of Education Senior Chancellor Henry Mack posted on Twitter on Thursday.

Mack also amplified a tweet by Chad Pecknold, a CLT board member, that said people seeking a testing option focused on the “great classical and Christian tradition” should go with the CLT option.

The governor’s office and the Department of Education did not respond to requests for comment regarding Mack’s tweets. DeSantis’ office also did not respond when asked whether CLT was being considered as an option.

Rodrigues confirmed in a text message Friday that he met with CLT executives earlier in the week because he wanted to learn more about their product.

“As you know the State University System is the largest university system in the country that still requires an entrance exam as part of our admissions process. We currently accept SAT and ACT,” Rodrigues said. “Adding another option for our students could be a method of improvemen­t.”

In recent months, national conservati­ve groups have called on governors to make state university admissions and state-funded scholarshi­p programs accept the CLT exam to make the schools “more charter and home-school friendly.”

“Many governors champion school choice. Those same governors should champion their state’s colleges and universiti­es including the Classic Learning Test as an equal option to the SAT and ACT,” Kevin Roberts, a CLT board member and president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank, wrote in a public “memo to governors” in November.

“Which governor will lead?” asked Roberts.

For Scott Marion, executive director of the Center for Assessment, a nonprofit that helps states design and evaluate tests, the CLT brings its own set of questions, such as how a relatively new test will stand up to a diverse pool of students compared to the more widely available SAT and ACT, and whether higher education institutio­ns outside of Florida will accept it.

In addition, Marion said, college admission department­s may not want to change their process too much.

“It could be fine for Florida schools, but what about the kids who want to go out of state?” he asked. Officials “have to know that the other colleges will take the test.”

DeSantis, who is eyeing a run for president in 2024, has been reshaping Florida’s education system by aggressive­ly targeting what he calls a “woke ideology” and “indoctrina­tion” in K-12 schools and higher-education institutio­ns.

While Tate admits conservati­ves are more likely to gravitate toward the Classic Learning Test — and that the company’s long list of advisers includes influentia­l conservati­ves that have DeSantis’ ear, he asserted, “We don’t want to be a Trumpy or conservati­ve test.”

Tate, whose background was in SAT and ACT prep classes, has also publicly argued that the solution to “mainstream” education is giving parents an education alternativ­e to “left-wing indoctrina­tion.”

Florida House Speaker Paul Renner was asked by DeSantis to look at alternativ­es to the College Board. In a statement last week, he said the goal is to look at providers who are focused on “delivering high-quality and fact-based education, not indoctrina­tion.”

Tate also told the Herald that Rodrigues was “very positive” when discussing expanding access to his test in Florida.

“We spent time looking through the test together, and he said it seems to fit, in terms of what they’re looking

for,” Tate said.

About 200 largely faithbased schools across the country accept the CLT assessment. Ten of them are in Florida, including Stetson University, Ave Maria University, Reformatio­n Bible College, Palm Beach Atlantic University, Pensacola Christian College and Trinity Baptist College.

According to the CLT’s website, the two-hour online assessment includes three sections: Verbal reasoning, grammar and writing, and quantitati­ve reasoning. It costs $54, a dollar less than the SAT. The test scores vary for the ACT, SAT and CLT. For example, the highest score for the CLT is 120; for the SAT is 1,600 and the ACT is 36.

The company says its test exists to “reconnect knowledge and virtue by providing meaningful assessment and connection­s to seekers of truth, goodness, and beauty.”

Erika Donalds, an avid school choice proponent and the wife of Republican U.S. Rep. Byron Donalds of Naples, says the main difference between the tests is that the Classic Learning Test refers to classic literature and historical texts and

the SAT and ACT “follows the Common Core route,” which includes nonfiction texts.

More broadly, however, she said there’s been a growing mistrust toward the SAT and AP courses, arguing the “SAT and the ACT are not very transparen­t.”

“As parents, we don’t get to see the questions,” Donalds said. “So I have a greater trust in reliabilit­y in CLT because I know the values behind that organizati­on and what they stand for.”

Erika Donalds, founder of the Optima Foundation, a network of classical charter schools in Florida with close ties to Hillsdale College, said she’s been asking for an alternativ­e to the College Board exam since the “anti-common core movement” began around 2009.

“We don’t feel like the SAT necessaril­y tells certain colleges what they would like to know about our graduates and what they know and how well they can read and comprehend historical texts and classical literature,” she said.

 ?? FILE ?? SAT test preparatio­n books sit on a shelf at a Barnes & Noble store June 27, 2002, in New York City.
FILE SAT test preparatio­n books sit on a shelf at a Barnes & Noble store June 27, 2002, in New York City.

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