From: Bob Schaeffer
[bobschaeffer@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2006 10:35
AM
To: bobschaeffer@fairtest.org
Subject: FairTest Reaction
to 2006 SAT Scores
FairTest
National Center for Fair & Open
Testing
for further
information:
Bob Schaeffer (239)
395-6773
cell: (239)
699-0468
for immediate
release, Tuesday, August 29, 2006
“NEW” SAT
AVERAGE SCORE PLUNGE, REGISTRATION DROP
FURTHER
UNDERMINE COLLEGE BOARD CREDIBILITY;
MORE SCHOOLS LIKELY TO ADOPT
TEST-OPTIONAL ADMISSIONS
This
year’s seven point decline in average SAT scores combined with a drop in the
number of students taking that admissions exam add to the mounting credibility
problems faced by the test’s sponsor, the College Board, according to assessment
reform advocates at the National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest).
The score plunge is the largest annual change in three decades; the number of
SAT takers declined for the first time since 1991.
“For decades, the College Board has claimed that
SAT scores are a ‘common yardstick’ that could be used to compare high school
classes over the years,” said FairTest Public Education Director Bob Schaeffer.
“As recently as this spring, they assured test-takers and admissions offices
that scores from their ‘new’ SAT would be consistent with the previous version.
Now they have to explain how and why the revised exam led to lower
scores.”
Schaeffer continued, “The decline in the number
of high school seniors taking the test, as the number registering for the rival
ACT increased, reflects widespread dissatisfaction with the ‘new’ SAT. More and
more students are convinced that the ‘new’ SAT is a pointless, high-priced
marathon that does not accurately assess their ability to do college work.” The
revised exam, introduced in March 2005 has been widely criticized for its
extended length, higher cost, scoring errors, and flaws in its “writing”
section.
“As a result of these growing controversies, we
expect the number of schools adopting test optional admissions policies to
continue growing,” Schaeffer concluded. “They increasingly understand that no
test, not the ‘old’ SAT, the ‘new’ SAT, or the ACT is needed to build a high
quality student body.”
In
recent years more than two dozen selective institutions including the College of
the Holy Cross, Providence
College, Drew University, Lawrence University, and George Mason
University have dropped
test score requirements for many or all applicants. Currently, 26 of the top 100
liberal arts colleges in the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings
do not require the SAT or ACT. All told more than 735 accredited,
bachelor-degree granting institutions have test-optional
policies.
- - 30 -
-
- 2006 SAT scores by race/ethnicity,
gender and income as well as a list of test-score optional colleges are online
at www.fairtest.org