Somehow, there are many College Board people involved with Common Core
So if you’re not penalized for the wrong answer, why take the test?
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It’s the thought that counts.....
Re removing the essay part. I think that it’s a number of features. First, too often students entering colleges (this is Kalifornia but likely true elsewhere) are not literate and therefore are required to take remedial English courses. So if they are going to have to take remedial English anyway, why have the essay section? I think this happened in Kalifornia because to be “fair” (increase minority admission over more qualified Asian and white students)the state public university system started considering for admission the top 10% of every high school. (talk about grade inflation tsunami).
Then there is the likelihood that they were using software programs to try to replace the time/effort/reliability issues of using live scorers.
If they were using live scorers - it’s time consuming and requires many highly skilled people (with better things to do with their time) to sit in a room and read essays all day. With the rate at which literacy is falling in our country, they are probably finding it hard to hire enough and are having to pay more for them. (e.g., it takes weeks of interviewing administrative assistants to find one that can write a business letter) So live scoring is very slow and expensive compared with computer scoring. They do train and test their scorers to try to eliminate subjectivity - scorers train until they are rating papers on par with others in their group - but it is always an issue.
I can imagine that inter-rater reliability was the subject of lawsuits when certain students were not admitted or perhaps challenges indicating that there were cultural differences that the “highly educated scorers” were not prepared to properly evaluate.(multiculturalism)
I think the strongest reason for changes to SAT scores is indeed common core -the scores MUST appear to increase with common core.
Without a penalty a "good guesser" can easily come out above average. With the penalty, it's hard.
If they dumb down the SAT any further they might as well just ask, “Are you a liberal? If so, perfect score!”
How many correct answers is the key. My score in the Verbal section was 780..Math, not so hot 410, At least I exempted English in college when the placement test they gave was averaged with the SAT. My kids scored the opposite, high in Math and average in English.
Here’s one you may find interesting.
This might not be as bad as it sounds...
The writing portion was added to the SAT several years ago, and many universities won’t even consider it, anyway, in the admissions process.
Also, according to what I’ve heard, by not penalizing students for wrong answers, the SAT is trying to become more like the ACT, which doesn’t deduct penalties for wrong answers.
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In other words, the old SAT’s are just plain too difficult for today’s kids....
before the new exam kicks in, the College Board, in partnership with Khan Academy, will offer free online practice problems from old tests and instructional videos showing how to solve them.
This could be bad news for the Washington Post. Wasnt Kaplan, the SAT Prep outfit, a cash cow for the owner of the WaPo? Competition from Khan could subvert Kaplans profitability (even more, I think it had fallen on hard times IIRC)