Showing posts with label SAT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SAT. Show all posts

Friday, March 14, 2014

In Case You Haven't Heard...the SAT is Changing

Last Wednesday, the President of the College Board, David Coleman, announced that they would be making the first major changes to the SAT since 2005. The changes come after the SAT has faced some major challenges, including skepticism from colleges about the test’s usefulness and competition from the rival ACT test. This new version, which will be launched in the spring of 2016, will be a test that more accurately tracks what students learn in school by eliminating obscure vocabulary words, ending the penalty for guessing, making the essay optional, allowing students to take it either by paper or on the computer and using documents such as the Declaration of Independence for reading comprehension.

There will be three sections on the new test: Evidence-Based Writing and Reading, Math and the Essay. The test will be about three hours, which is 45 minutes shorter than the current version. The SAT will also once again be scored on a 1600 point scale. In the reading and writing section, students will be asked to support answers with evidence- some questions will require them to cite a specific part of a passage to back up an answer that they chose. The section will also include passages from historical documents in an array of disciplines, including science and social studies. The math section will be focused in greater depth on fewer topics and will concentrate on problem solving, data analysis and algebra. Calculators will only be allowed on some portions of the math section.

The College Board will also be offering more options for low and middle income students. All SAT takers who are financially eligible will directly receive four college application fee waivers. They also plan to partner with the online Khan Academy to provide free online test preparation, including access to previously unreleased practice problems and instructional videos about the exam.

In September of 2012, it was announced that for the first time in history, more students took the ACT than the SAT, which is a trend that continued in 2013. Many of the new changes mirror the ACT, such as the elimination of the guessing penalty and the optional writing section. There have also been a growing number of colleges (now close to 800) that have eliminated the SAT and the ACT as admission requirements, citing a 2008 University of California study which characterized the SAT as a “relatively poor predictor of student performance.” Critics have stated that the new SAT changes are the College Board’s way to compete with the ACT by making it a more similar test and to stay relevant in the college admissions process.

Because the new SAT will become available in the spring of 2016, the changes will not impact GVPS juniors or sophomores. The only current Visitation class that will be taking the new SAT is our 9th grade class; once the new SAT is released, the current SAT will no longer be available. The new version of the PSAT will be released in the fall of 2015 in order to prepare students for the redesign. The college counseling office will be speaking to students and parents further about the new test as the timeline approaches.

For more information about the new SAT and the reasoning behind the changes, check out some of these articles:





Published by: LP

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Breaking news! The SAT is changing!

This is big news in the world of college admissions and you heard it hear first! This won't impact current juniors or seniors but it's interesting information for those of us who get to live through the college process year after year. Eric Hoover explains it all below:
 

The Chronicle of Higher Education
College Board Plans an ‘Improved’ SAT
Eric Hoover
February 26, 2013

For months the College Board’s new president has hinted that change was coming to the SAT. Now he has made the organization’s intentions clear.

In an e-mail to College Board members on Monday, David Coleman said the group would better connect elementary and secondary schools with colleges and universities by developing “a more innovative assessment that sharply focuses on a core set of knowledge and skills that are essential for readiness, access, and success,” and that are “most important to prepare students for the rigors of college and career.”
The College Board, in collaboration with college and high-school officials, he wrote, will soon revise the nation’s most famous test so that it “mirrors the work that students will do in college.”
Although Mr. Coleman’s e-mail was short on specifics, he said the organization’s development of “an improved SAT” would be guided by three broad objectives: to increase the test’s value to students, schools, and colleges. As for the latter, he wrote, the College Board would ensure that the revised examination “meets the evolving needs of admission officers, faculty, and other administrators, and that the SAT remains a valid and reliable predictor of college success.”
Last year Mr. Coleman told The Chronicle that he hoped to align the SAT with the Common Core standards, which could further alter the identity of an exam that was long ago conceived of as a measure of students’ innate abilities. Mr. Coleman has also criticized the SAT’s required essay, which measures how students write—but not so much what they write.
“As kids move on to colleges and careers, you have to be accountable to evidence,” Mr. Coleman said in an interview last spring. “Since we’ve given them no source material, we have to say, ‘Wait a minute, what have we done?’ We’ve created this as a performance.”
The College Board plans to hold meetings throughout the nation to solicit input on the SAT’s redesign. If someone’s kind enough to invite me to any of those sessions, I’ll be sure to bring the punch.

Published by: TSM

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Don't Forget to List College Recipients on Your SAT!

A VERY IMPORTANT REMINDER!

If you are taking the October 6th SAT or SAT II Subject Tests, please remember that you should list any college you are applying to in November on the recipient list of your October SAT registration. Now is a good time to go back into your SAT registration and confirm that you have listed the appropriate schools to receive your scores as soon as they are available. Please see your college counselor if you have any questions!

Published by: LG