What Does the College Board’s New ‘Adversity Score’ Mean For You?
Posted July 16, 2019, 2:55 pm byUnderstanding how the new Environmental Context Dashboard impacts your college application.
In mid-May, the Wall Street Journal broke the story that the College Board “plans to assign an adversity score to every student who takes the SAT.” The new score has been widely discussed in the college admissions community and could significantly change the admissions process over time. The immediate question for many parents and students is this: How does it affect my teen and their application to college?
The term “adversity score” is a misnomer for what the College Board calls an Environmental College Dashboard (ECD). Over the past year, the College Board has piloted the tool with about 50 universities. Many say it has helped them work toward their goal of increasing socioeconomic diversity. The ECD considers two sets of factors to put a student's SAT scores in the context of the child’s school and neighborhood.
- Factors about their neighborhood or city, such as crime rate and percent of families below the poverty line.
- Factors about their school, such as the number of students who take AP courses and the percentage of students who qualify for free or reduced-price school lunches.
These factors are sociological rather than psychological factors. For example, the ECD doesn’t account for the fact that a student might live in a family where a parent suffers from illness, or have a parent deployed to a war-zone.
It doesn’t account for all sociological factors, either. If you live outside of the U.S., or in a very rural area, or are part of a military family stationed on a base, the ECD might not accurately assess your situation. Nor will it address students who take the ACT.
Increasing diversity, measured in different ways, has been a long-time goal at many universities. Mark Salisbury, founder and CEO of TuitionFit, who has studied the same issues addressed by the ECD, says the ECD is not a fundamentally new tool, but a way to “quantify what admissions officials were already trying to do.”
Admissions officials often don’t know every school from which they draw applications, so allowing them to quickly check on the school and the area can help to put an application in context.
In the long term, we will have to wait to see how universities use this information, but in the short-term, it will likely give a leg up to a few students who might not have been considered previously. That might mean it slightly disadvantages a few students from relatively affluent families who are borderline cases for admissions.
For parents in the application process, this has a couple of important implications:
- Build your college list in a statistically and personally sound way, since it has always been true – and will be even more so – that predicting your odds of admission at any particular college is a huge challenge. So including a blend of likely, target, and reach schools on your list, and creating one that reflects your priorities, is critical.
- Highlight the factors that make you unique. If you have overcome significant adversity – personally or sociologically – make sure you highlight it by writing about in an essay or including it in the Additional Information section of the CommonApp (or other application).
Ultimately, it’s important to remember that, as Salisbury says, the “college admissions process isn’t fair, and isn’t meant to be.” Accepting that allows you to control your destiny to a much greater extent by creating a college list wisely and making sure you tell your story effectively in each application.
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