Students say SAT a struggle
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Michael Miller
Newport-Mesa juniors and seniors on Monday faced one of the most
stressful times in any high school student’s career -- announcement
of SAT results.
But their day was unique for more than one reason. The students
who rose from bed -- some as early as 5 a.m. -- to check their scores
online were among the first to take the new SAT, which debuted this
spring.
On March 12, prospective college students nationwide took the
revamped version of the standardized test, which eliminates the
verbal analogies and quantitative comparisons from the original test
and adds an hour-long writing portion. Before, a perfect score on the
SAT was 1600. In its new form, with more than an hour of added
testing time, the top mark is 2400.
With 1600 no longer the magic number, many students didn’t know
what to expect on Monday. Some were disappointed by what they
estimated as low marks, while others, despite little in the way of a
precedent, found themselves pleasantly surprised.
“As much as I was annoyed by it, I’m happy with the way it came
out,” said Harrison Brown, 16, a junior at Newport Harbor High
School. Brown, who got a 2060 on the test, hadn’t yet decided whether
to retake it later this year.
Many of Brown’s classmates, along with their peers at other
schools, complained about the extreme length of the test. The SAT, in
its current incarnation, has an official running time of three hours,
45 minutes.
“I was really well prepared because of the Princeton Review
[practice] test, but like any four-hour test, it was long and
grueling,” said Audrey Nisbet, 16, a junior at Newport Harbor. “You
lose your focus a little bit when you sit there for four hours,
answering multiple choice questions.”
Nisbet, who scored a 1970 on the test, said she planned to take it
again and was shooting for a mark “anywhere in the 2000s.”
Last year, 55% of seniors in Newport-Mesa took the SAT. The
average Newport-Mesa score out of 1600 was 1080, higher than the
statewide average of 1020 and the national average of 1026. Peggy
Anatol, director of K-12 assessment for Newport-Mesa, said her office
would receive a complete list of district SAT scores in late summer
or fall.
The College Board, which controls the SAT, offered the old version
in October, November, December and January, with the new version
beginning in March. Students may take the new test in May and June.
A number of Newport-Mesa students had spent years practicing for
the old SAT, only to find the test reconfigured in 2005. Jennifer
Holt, 17, a junior at Costa Mesa High School, said she had taken
practice SATs her first three years of high school and ended up
studying for the current exam with a guide “like a phone book.” She
was disappointed by her score of 1570, but said she would retake the
test in June.
Sarah Muradian, 17, a junior at Estancia High, was happy with her
2170 score but questioned the effectiveness of the test itself.
“When a test is that long, I don’t know if it tests your ability
that well because you’re so drained,” Muradian said. “By the end, I
didn’t really care that much. I just wanted to go eat.”
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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