High school officials mixed over SAT elimination plan
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Angelique Flores
Huntington Beach Union High School District officials have mixed
feelings over the UC president’s proposal to eliminate the SAT as a
requirement for admission to the university’s undergraduate campuses.
“It’s not unexpected, it has been under discussion for quite some
time,” said Dorothy Crutcher, the district’s director of pupil personnel,
who oversees the standardized testing in the district.
The Scholastic Assessment Test is a standardized exam required for
admission to many colleges and universities. UC President Richard
Atkinson has said the test is unfair and fails to measure how much
students learned in high school.
“My question is what are they going to replace it with?” Trustee Susan
Henry said.
Because UC campuses still need a common measure to compare students
from different high schools, Atkinson is calling for test makers to
create a new exam that would be directly tied to college preparatory
courses.
“No test is perfect; whatever replaces it is still going to be a
standardized test,” Trustee Matthew Harper said.
Because grade point averages are not a standard measurement, the SAT
provides a uniform assessment of students.
However, some would argue these scores are not always fair. Students
who can afford to take the test preparatory courses can pack in an extra
50 or 100 points on SAT sores, Crutcher said.
“Are we getting so elite that only the wealthy can have preparation in
test-taking skills?” she asks.
SAT scores correlate with family income, Crutcher said, adding that
SAT II tests and ACT tests better measure what the students are taught in
high school. The SAT II multiple-choice exams test students in specific
subjects. The ACT assesses students in English, mathematics, reading and
science reasoning.
“There’s validity there, and it’s fair,” said Crutcher about the the
ACT and SAT II exams. “I hope they survive this.”
Some colleges have already ceased using the SAT, or at least put less
weight on the scores, district officials said.
“Colleges for the last several decades rely more and more on
preparation than a number,” she said. “I’d like to get away from the
simple numerical evaluations: IQ, SAT, class rank . . . none of those
really mean much.”
While Atkinson has already gained support from the chairman of the
faculty’s Academic Assembly and some of the regents, his proposal would
need the approval of the UC faculty’s academic council and the UC Board
of Regents. The tests are expected to remain in use for another two
years.
“I think it’s really silly that it’s getting that much press, there’s
not a second half of the proposal,” Harper said.
Harper also wonders if the UC system’s move to eliminate the test will
be a detriment to the high academic reputation it has.”I’m going to take
a ‘wait and see’ attitude,” Henry said.
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