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Home » CSU Panel Recommends Eliminating The Use Of SAT And ACT Exams For Admission

CSU Panel Recommends Eliminating The Use Of SAT And ACT Exams For Admission

by CLAYCORD.com
16 comments

By Ashley A. Smith – EdSource

The nation’s largest public university system has signaled plans to eliminate the use of standardized tests like the SAT and ACT for admission to its 23 campuses.

California State University trustees heard a recommendation Wednesday from the system’s admissions advisory committee to remove the standardized testing requirement and replace it with a so-called multifactor admission score that allows colleges to consider 21 factors.

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The factors would vary by campus and include work experience, leadership roles, extracurricular activities and special status such as foster youth, first-generation or military.

“As we evolve our admission standards, we do so with a focus on equity and increased awareness of the new data from standardized test scores,” said April Grommo, assistant vice chancellor for CSU enrollment management services. The university system’s research teams analyzed SAT results, scores from the Smarter Balanced assessment, and CSU’s 2016 freshman class GPA before recommending this new approach.

They found high school GPA was a much stronger predictor of college readiness than either the SAT or the Smarter Balanced assessment, Grommo said.

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When the board officially approves the change in March, CSU will join UC, whose board of regents decided last year that the nine undergraduate campuses would not accept any SAT or ACT scores for admissions.

There’s been a nationwide trend to eliminate the use of SAT or ACT exams for admission. As of Jan. 11, more than 1,800 colleges and universities have eliminated the SAT or ACT from their admissions requirements, according to the National Center for Fair and Open Testing.

The College Board, which administers the SAT exam, has been repositioning its place in determining college readiness as university after university drops the test. Earlier this week, College Board announced that the slate of SAT exams would be delivered digitally in the United States by 2024, and the exam would take two hours instead of three. Grommo said those changes wouldn’t affect CSU’s decision.

“In a largely test-optional world, the SAT is a lower-stakes test in college admissions,” said Priscilla Rodriguez, vice president of college readiness assessments at College Board. “Submitting a score is optional for every type of college, and we want the SAT to be the best possible option for students. The SAT allows every student — regardless of where they go to high school — to be seen and to access opportunities that will shape their lives and careers.”

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Harvard University extended a test-optional policy through the Class of 2030. Iowa’s public institutions voted this month to permanently no longer require the tests for admission to Iowa State University, the University of Iowa and the University of Northern Iowa. Both Colorado and Illinois governors have signed legislation requiring their state’s universities to have test-optional admissions.

CSU faculty is also in support of eliminating SAT and ACT tests from admission.

“We all realized that in many cases, the disparities in terms of access outweigh the benefits of the SAT and ACT,” said Robert Keith Collins, chair of CSU’s Academic Senate and a professor at San Francisco State. “I was concerned with writing because writing was not a component when I took the SAT, but now there is a component for assessing writing competency. And since we’ve done away with remediation, the question is would our students be college-ready? And yes, they will, if we use the K-12 predictors.”

Collins said professors also welcome the challenge of bringing new students up to college-level readiness.

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The CSU and University of California systems dropped the SAT and ACT admissions requirements during the coronavirus pandemic because many high school students couldn’t take the exam during the health crisis.

Pre-pandemic students seeking to attend CSU had to take the SAT or ACT. High school graduates needed to complete so-called A-G course sequences with a C grade or higher. The courses are 15 high school classes that cover math, English, science, visual and performing arts, and a college preparatory elective. Students with higher GPAs could offset lower SAT or ACT scores, but students with lower GPAs would need a higher standardized test score to increase their eligibility.

During the pandemic, CSU eliminated the testing requirement and examined additional factors for those students who applied with GPAs between 2.0 and 2.49.

CSU has admitted nearly 93 percent of students who have applied to its campuses in the past several years, and there is an expectation that the rate will increase by removing SAT or ACT for admission, Grommo said.

Although standardized tests won’t be used for CSU admission, they would be helpful on some campuses for determining placement in math and English classes, she said.

Despite what appears to be a widespread consensus that the system needs to remove the standardized test requirement, “this is not without opposition,” CSU trustee Julia Lopez said.

“There are people who would like it to remain the way it was, and there will be people who will want to argue that this is actually reducing the quality of instruction.”

Lopez warned that the system would need to be ready to justify the change and standards and prove that it’s making the right decision.

But as a former school principal, trustee Diego Arambula said the SAT and ACT exams have been a burden for parents and students.

“This issue has overwhelmed students and families for a long time,” he said. “We ended up spending a fair amount of time trying to overcome and account for what is such a challenging process. And now to see that it has little to no predictive power and that a GPA alone is actually better … makes it abundantly clear to me that we can clear this off of the plates of young people and their families.”

16 comments


WhoDat Gurl January 27, 2022 - 10:22 AM - 10:22 AM

Let me guess what the “multifactors” are: race, poverty, zip code, declared sexuality, declared gender, emotional gender, political affiliation, etc

I remember the days when working hard, studying hard and scholastic achievement meant going to a college near your parents’ home so you could work hard some more, live at home during college, contribute to your family and then eventually move out after you’ve saved up.

Now, if you identify as anything other than “typical”, you’ll get a free ride, become an “influencer” make a bazillion dollars before your 18th birthday, and still struggle with the difference between “their”, “they’re” and “there”.

Antler January 27, 2022 - 11:53 AM - 11:53 AM

Thank you, Whodat Gurl.
Standardized tests help to prevent high school teachers from inflating grades in order to put their schools and students into a category of higher probability of getting accepted into a college or university.
“Grade Inflation” is a heinous form of CHEATING.

chuckie the troll January 27, 2022 - 3:20 PM - 3:20 PM

Just imagine what medical care will be like in a few years when unqualified students become doctors? When something goes wrong and you want to sue, you’ll be told that “Medical Malpractice” is a racist term.

Johnnycomelately January 27, 2022 - 4:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Chuckie,nobody will be held responsible,as they trained themsleves,and you cant sue any college or training center.This is the whole point.No more liabilty.

WhoDat Gurl January 27, 2022 - 8:24 PM - 8:24 PM

@Antler,

Thanks. You’re so right.

@Chuckie,

As a retired healthcare professional, I worry about this quite a lot. Medicine is an extremely stressful job, and requires so much sacrifice, I wonder if any student in their teens or twenties is able to pass basic chemistry and biology, much less become a physician. Just offer a young person a $10 and change, and ask them to give you the correct change when making a purchase at any retail establishment; they’ll struggle, ask for help and then give up if the register doesn’t spoon feed them the correct answer.

WDG

redrazor January 27, 2022 - 11:04 AM - 11:04 AM

1000+ to WTG!!!

Antler January 27, 2022 - 11:54 AM - 11:54 AM

Standardized tests help to prevent high school teachers from inflating grades in order to put their schools and students into a category of higher probability of getting accepted into a college or university.
“Grade Inflation” is a heinous form of CHEATING.

ClayDen January 27, 2022 - 12:23 PM - 12:23 PM

Agree.

Anonymous January 27, 2022 - 11:57 AM - 11:57 AM

“Collins said professors also welcome the challenge of bringing new students up to college-level readiness.”

LOL Seriously?

CSU already accepts 93% of admissions and they want to raise that number? IOW, accept students who have no business being in college.

If I was a hiring manager, I would toss CSU grad resumes except Cal Poly.

chuckie the troll January 27, 2022 - 2:43 PM - 2:43 PM

I’m fine with this as long as sports teams award scholarships and placement on teams without a test. Do it all by lottery. It would make for an entertaining season.

All jokes aside, this is as stupid as everything else the Communists ruining, er I mean running California in Sacramento are doing these days.

Randy January 27, 2022 - 2:51 PM - 2:51 PM

… more dumbing of our youth and the general population….

PESFG January 27, 2022 - 6:51 PM - 6:51 PM

Many of these CSUs should make professors go through psychiatric/psychological evaluations. Many of them have no business being there, expecting students to align with their beliefs personal under the disguise of it being part of the subject matter, and ostracizing those who don’t align with those beliefs.

Caskydiver January 27, 2022 - 8:58 PM - 8:58 PM

Advancement based on merit is dead.

Kauai Mike January 28, 2022 - 5:03 AM - 5:03 AM

Just another facet of the ‘dumb them down’ strategy of the left to control the masses. It’s working.

Lars Anderson January 28, 2022 - 9:20 AM - 9:20 AM

This is a horrible idea, it will punish the students who work hard and get good grades in high school while rewarding students that barley open a book in high school. Student who get top grades in high school, and top test scores deserve to go to the elite colleges and universities – they earned that with the hard work they put in studying
Doing away with test scores for college admissions also takes away the incentive high schools kids had and for taking and passing advanced AP courses. How is that good for high school students? Now high school kids can skip taking these harder classes, they can goof off, but still get admitted to Cal and UCLA by just taking easy courses from teachers that don’t grade very hard.
Pursuing such a policy will dummy down high school students, and dummy down the students who get admitted to these top notch schools. Under this policy you will likely see many more students drop out of the elites colleges because they are not prepared to do the more demanding work typically found in the UC’s in California.
California has long had a path to college for underperforming his school students that perform poorly on the ACT and the SAT. If you are in this boat you enroll at a community college, which has an open admissions policy, no test scores are required. If you take and pass 60 units you can then get admitted to a state college of university, no test scores are needed.
This was a smart policy, because students who goof off in high school often need remedial work in subject areas, such as Math and language. Our community colleges are great at helping students that need to do remedial work.
With these new policy – no test scores at needed to go to Cal of UCLA – students that need remedial work will get admitted, which will lead to many of them dropping out.
In California we have long had a way to get around poor college test scores.

Ngate January 28, 2022 - 12:33 PM - 12:33 PM

Dumb. No pun intended


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