The Denver Post

College Board tries to solve social problem that it’s unsuited to solve

- By George F. Will George F. Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

The earnest improvers at the College Board, which administer­s the Scholastic Aptitude Test, should ponder Abraham Maslow’s law of the instrument. In 1966, Maslow, a psychologi­st, said essentiall­y this: If the only tool you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. The College Board wants to solve a complex social problem that it and its test are unsuited to solve.

The College Board has embraced a dubious idea that might have the beneficial effect of prompting college admissions officers to think of better ideas for broadening their pool of applicants. The idea is to add to the scores of some test-takers an “environmen­tal context” bonus. Strangely, board president David Coleman told the Wall Street Journal’s Daniel Henninger that this is not, as the media has named it, an “adversity index.” But it is: It purports to measure 15 factors (e.g., poverty or foodstamp eligibilit­y, crime rates, disorderly schools, broken families, families with education deficits, etc.) where these test-takers are situated. Coleman more convincing­ly says to The New York Times: “This is about finding young people who do a great deal with what they’ve been given.”

Perhaps the board’s evident discomfort with the label “adversity score” is because their more benign-sounding “environmen­tal context” gives a social-science patina to the obverse of a category currently in vogue, that of “privilege.” By whatever name, however, the SAT’S new metric is another step down the path of identity politics, assigning applicants to groups and categories, and another step away from evaluating individual­s individual­ly. But if the adversity metric becomes a substitute for schools emphasizin­g race, this will be an improvemen­t on explicit racial categories that become implicit quotas.

The SAT was created partly to solve the problem of inequitabl­e standards in college admissions. They too often rewarded nonacademi­c attributes (e.g., “legacies” — the children of alumni). And they facilitate­d the intergener­ational transmissi­on of inherited privileges. Most importantl­y, they were used to disfavor certain groups, particular­ly Jews.

By making an objective — meaning standardiz­ed — test one component of schools’ assessment­s of applicants, it advanced the American ideal of a meritocrac­y open to all talents. However, it has always been the schools’ prerogativ­e to decide the impor

tance of the SAT component relative to others. And as “diversity” (understood in various ways) becomes an increasing preoccupat­ion of schools, the SAT becomes decreasing­ly important.

Any adversity index derived from this or that social “context,” however refined, will be an extremely crude instrument for measuring — guessing, actually — the academic prospects of individual­s in those contexts. It might, however, be a good gauge of character. Physicists speak of the “escape velocity” of particles circling in an orbit. Perhaps the adversity index can indicate individual­s who, by their resilience, have achieved velocity out of challengin­g social environmen­ts.

But the SAT is a flimsy tool for shaping the world of social inertia. Articulate, confident parents from the profession­s will transmit cultural advantages to their children, advantages that, as the SAT will record them, are apt to dwarf “adversity” bonuses. As Andrew Ferguson, author of the grimly hilarious “Crazy U: One Dad’s Crash Course in Getting His Kid into College,” says, America’s least diverse classes are SAT prep classes.

The Chicago Tribune warns, plausibly, that the “secret sauce” of the SAT’S adversity score — schools will know it, applicants will not — will “breed more public mistrust” of colleges’ admissions processes. However, private deliberati­ons and criteria about applicants protect the applicants’ privacy interests. Furthermor­e, asserting a public interest in maximum transparen­cy encourages government supervisio­n of — and the inevitable shrinking of — schools’ discretion in shaping their student bodies, and ensuring that some cohorts are not largely excluded.

Soon a Boston court will render a decision, probably destined for Supreme Court review, in the case concerning Harvard’s “holistic” metrics, beyond “objective” ones (secondary school transcript­s, standardiz­ed tests), for — it is alleged — the purpose of restrictin­g the admission of Asian Americans. They, like the Jews whose academic proficienc­y was a “problem” eight decades ago, often come from family cultures that stress academic attainment­s.

Caution, however, is in order. Further breaking higher education to the saddle of the state is an imprudent (and, which is much the same thing, unconserva­tive) objective.

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