College Admissions Help Blog

College Search and Admissions Help Blog

09.22.08 | SAT scores not required?

Posted in College Admissions, SAT by College Search Advisor

Personally I bombed the SAT’s. I don’t do very well with standardized testing. I mean, whose standards are they anyway? Perhaps my son won’t have to too take them by the time he is ready for college.

Recent debate has been raised over whether the scholastic aptitude test (SAT) is really necessary.
William R. Fitzsimmons, the dean of admissions and financial aid at Harvard, conducted a year long study and found that standardized testing can not possibly measure someone’s true worth or ability. He cited backgrounds and the contrast in opportunities that some students are granted in upscale suburban high schools.

Furthermore, parents continue to pay a lot of money for students to take prep classes which are only preparing them for the test and not teaching them how to learn Fitzsimmons said.

A growing number of colleges, including Smith College in Massachusetts and Bates College in Maine, have made the SAT and ACT exams optional.

09.22.08 | NACAC report on Standardized Tests in Admission

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

The National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) has released a report on the use of standardized tests in undergraduate admissions.This was first reported by the New York Times and reviewed here earlier today. The NACAC has now released a link to the report for those who would like to review the actual report.

09.22.08 | College Panel Calls for Less Focus on SATs

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

NY TIMES

September 22, 2008
By SARA RIMER

A commission convened by some of the country’s most influential college admissions officials is recommending that colleges and universities move away from their reliance on SAT and ACT scores and shift toward admissions exams more closely tied to the high school curriculum and achievement.

The commission’s report, the culmination of a yearlong study led by William R. Fitzsimmons, the dean of admissions and financial aid at Harvard, comes amid growing concerns that the frenzy over standardized college admissions tests is misshaping secondary education and feeding a billion-dollar test-prep industry that encourages students to try to game the tests.

A growing number of colleges and universities, like Bates College in Maine, Lawrence University in Wisconsin, Wake Forest University in North Carolina and Smith College in Massachusetts, have made the SAT and ACT optional. And the report concludes that more institutions could make admissions decisions without requiring the SAT and ACT.

It encourages institutions to consider dropping admission test requirements unless they can prove that the benefits of such tests outweigh the negatives.

“It would be much better for the country,” Mr. Fitzsimmons said in an interview, “to have students focusing on high school courses that, based on evidence, will prepare them well for college and also prepare them well for the real world beyond college, instead of their spending enormous amounts of time trying to game the SAT.”

Mr. Fitzsimmons’s group, which was convened by the National Association for College Admission Counseling, also expresses concerns “that test scores appear to calcify differences based on class, race/ethnicity and parental educational attainment.” The report calls on admissions officials to be aware of such differences and to ensure that differences not related to a student’s ability to succeed academically be “mitigated in the admission process.”

“Society likes to think that the SAT measures people’s ability or merit,” Mr. Fitzsimmons said. “But no one in college admissions who visits the range of secondary schools we visit, and goes to the communities we visit — where you see the contrast between opportunities and fancy suburbs and some of the high schools that aren’t so fancy — can come away thinking that standardized tests can be a measure of someone’s true worth or ability.”

Mr. Fitzsimmons said that at Harvard high school grades and the College Board’s individual subject tests are considered better predictors of college success than the SAT or ACT, and that the university is studying the use of standardized tests in its admissions. He added that it was possible that the university might eventually make such tests optional.

The admission counseling association gave the report to The New York Times in advance of its official release at its annual meeting in Seattle this week. The report emphasizes academic research that suggests that test preparation and coaching results in an increase of 20 to 30 points on the SAT, which it calls “a modest gain (on the old 1600 scale)” that “is considerably less than the 100 point or more gains that are often accepted as conventional wisdom.”

The report also calls for an end to the practice of using minimum-admissions-test scores to determine students’ eligibility for merit aid. And it specifically urges the National Merit Scholarship Corporation to stop using PSAT scores as the initial screen for eligibility for recognition or scholarships. The National Merit Scholarship competition “contributes to the misperception of test scores as sole measures of ‘merit’ in a pervasive and highly visible manner,” the report says.

More than 280 four-year colleges do not require standardized test scores for admission, according to the study. The report says that the College Board’s Advanced Placement exams and Subject Tests and the International Baccalaureate exams are more closely linked to the high school curriculum than the SAT and ACT, and have little expensive test preparation associated with them.

The report suggests that what is needed is a new achievement test, pitched to a broad group of students, that would predict college grades as well as or better than available tests.

Using such an achievement test in admissions would “encourage high schools to broaden and improve curricula,” according to the report, and would also send a message to students to focus on their high school course material instead of on test preparation courses.

David Hawkins, the director of public policy and research for the association, pulled together the commission’s findings into the report. He said its value was “in the nearly explicit sentiment that the current admission tests are not optimal tools for admission in 2008.”

Robert Schaeffer, public education director for The National Center for Fair and Open Testing, a group critical of standardized admissions testing, called the report “a strong condemnation of the overreliance on test scores,” and said he expected it to carry much weight with association members, who include thousands of college admissions officials and high school guidance counselors.

One commission member, Steve Syverson, is vice president for enrollment at Lawrence University, which made the SAT and ACT optional several years ago. Mr. Syverson said he hoped the report would encourage more college admissions officials to question their use of standardized admissions tests.

“We’re all just making assumptions about these tests,” Mr. Syverson said, referring to the SAT and the ACT. “We’ve all grown up with it. It’s embedded in the culture. If you really ask around the country, how many admissions officers can tell you at their institution what the predictive validity of the test is? What does it add to our understanding? What do tests help you predict? You’d find a lot of them equate these tests with intelligence. It’s not an intelligence test.”

09.11.08 | College Search and Admissions Website

Posted in College Admissions by College Search Advisor

If you’re thinking about college admissions, you should begin planning right away. Applying to college can be overwhelming if you wait until the last minute.

The College Search season has begun and it is time to start planning. A great place to start is www.HowToGetIn.com, an online portal with a coll college search feature as well as a number of articles and pages of advice on college admissions.

How To Get In offers a monthly student newsletter highlighting the recommended steps for freshmen, sophomores, junior and seniors every month of the year. This can be a valuable tool for parents and students alike. Be sure to register for Student Action Plan, our monthly college planning newsletter.

09.11.08 | Cheat, cheat, never beat

Posted in Graduate Admissions by College Search Advisor

If you were considering having someone take the Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) for you, (a hired gun if you will) don’t do it!

Cheating is common in all walks of life and holds severe consequences if caught – the GMAT is no exception. Don’t put yourself in that position. Don’t sink to that level. You are better than that.

Authorities recently broke up a ring of 6 fraudsters who were being paid up to $3,000 to take the GMAT test for students. They took 590 exams total and now those students scores are understandably being wiped out and they are now banned for three years from taking the GMAT again.

In an effort to avoid this happening again the business-school council recently announced that it would require those taking the GMAT to undergo a “palm vein” scan which takes an infrared picture of the blood coursing thru your hands. They would then match that to your vein scan on file for authenticity. It’s quick and easy, literally taking a couple of seconds. It’s so Star Trek the Next Generation. My brother would be proud.

So consider this blog your warning. Whether you are extracting test information on-line from certain websites of hiring students in your stead to take the exam it will catch up to you. Play it straight. Do it right. You can’t put a price tag on integrity.