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    Here’s Everything You Need to Know About the New SAT

    Posted March 6, 2014, 5:57 pm by Customer Service
    The New SAT

    The college application process is about to see some dramatic changes.

    The New SAT

    This week, the College Board announced plans to refocus and realign the SAT—a test loathed and feared by so many high school students. Possibly as a result of a study released by the National Association for College Admissions Counseling, which proved that strong grades are a better indicator of academic performance than test scores, the College Board will make the SAT more focused on the high school curriculum.

    A New York Times article, “A New SAT Aims to Realign With Schoolwork,” explains the changes in the new SAT, including a scoring scale of 1,600, ending the penalty for guessing wrong, removing obscure vocabulary words, and creating an “optional” essay. Instead of the current 2,400-point test, the SAT will be divided into two 800-point sections: Math and “evidence-based reading and writing.”

     

    David Coleman, president of the College Board, has been formulating these changes since he started his position in 2012 and is not afraid of discussing the SAT’s setbacks. Coleman criticized the SAT and the ACT, saying standardized tests have “become disconnected from the work of our high schools.” He also agrees that high school grades can better predict college performance than standardized testing.

    [Get ready for any standardized test with Tutoring & Test Prep.]

    The ACT executives were not happy with Coleman’s criticism. Ironically, according to many educational professionals, the SAT is moving in a similar direction to the ACT. Independent College Consultant, Judy Zodda, remarked,

    The SAT will now be much more aligned with the ACT in terms of being closer related to what kids are actually learning—and what they really know and should know. What they are learning real-time. The SAT is largely based on logic and reasoning and test-taking strategy, in which you are penalized for guessing, while the ACT is classroom-based material.

    Similarly, Jon Erickson, president of ACT’s educational division, said, “It seems like they’re mostly following what we’ve always done.”

    Low-Income Students

    The new SAT will also help low-income students, who will be given waivers to apply to four colleges at no charge. Coleman acknowledges that the plethora of test prep and tutoring for the exam stems from the fact that the SAT does not reflect high school classes or learning—this expensive preparation ultimately gives affluent students a large advantage.

    Now that the SAT strives to value traditional high school learning, it will be interesting to see how “test-optional” schools consider this change. Ultimately, the more the SAT reflects the high school curriculum, the gap between exam scores and school grades will shrink.

    Changes for 2016

    Here are some of the changes in the new SAT, which will start in the spring of 2016:

    • Scoring will be based on a 1,600-point scale.
    • The vocabulary section of the new test will contain words commonly used in college courses, like “synthesis” and “empirical.”
    • The essay will become optional and will have a separate score. Students who opt-in to take the essay will be asked to read a passage and analyze how the author used evidence, reasoning, and style to build an argument.
    • No points will be deducted for incorrect answers.
    • The reading and writing section will include information and questions regarding science, social studies, and other high school disciplines.
    • The test will include a reading passage from one of America’s “founding documents,” such as the Declaration of Independence or the Bill of Rights.
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    Sophie Borden graduated from Washington University in St. Louis with degrees in Environmental Studies, Spanish, and Writing. She is a Marketing Associate at TeenLife and lives in Boston. She loves traveling, cooking, and dogs, especially her little rescue pup, Lily.

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