borg
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- Joined
- Sep 16, 2004
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I can understand your feelings regarding standardized testing (SAT, ACT, PSAT, SSAT, etc.) but I do recognize the value of these tests as an additional piece of information on a students application.No offense, but the SATs are the sham, as are most of the "standardized tests" that they give students nowadays.. Especially with all the changes that they've made to them over the past 2 decades..
My youngest is currently enrolled in a summer long, semi private SAT course and there is no question in my mind, the more you spend the better the score....and that is the scam. At least it used to be.
Starting this past year, both SAT and ACT have created free online courses to minimize the economic unfairness that previously existed. The amount of free material/practice tests/video tutorials/etc is extensive and on par with private courses. In fact, many services have folded thanks to this change.
As you had mentioned, the tests have changed considerably over the years. It is my belief the test questions have evolved from vocabulary/definitions + math problems into critical thinking/application problems. Having helped my oldest with the old SAT three years ago and now my youngest as he prepares for the "New SAT"....the tests are night and day...and in my opinion a better measure now of one's ability to think verses regurgitate.
Which gets me to my next point and backed by the USA Today article I posted earlier talking about grade inflation. Here in Florida, at least in the public schools, most everyone gets all A's. Students who have flunked out of local private high schools often miraculously become Dean's list and Honor students as soon as they enter even the highest rated public high schools. Grade inflation is epidemic here and the best way to argue this is to point to the Class of 2020 at the University of Florida, considered the state's most academic public university. The middle 50% of admitted UF students have a 4.6 GPA. This average is higher than most every elite school in America....it's a joke. Even scarier, these high GPAs exist even after the colleges toss out non core classes designed to boost averages. The valedictorian at my kid's private high school with her 4.6 GPA (going to MIT) would be considered average at UF.
With 45,000 applicants every year who most likely have near perfect transcripts thanks to the sham of a system in place, the only tool to measure these students on an equal scale is the standardized test. It is what it is.
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