College Admissions Tests
COLLEGE ADMISSIONS TESTS
The ACT Assessment and SAT are the most popular college entrance tests administered in the United States.
The ACT
The ACT Assessment, formerly called the American College Test, is a standardized examination required by many colleges and universities in the United States for admission to their undergraduate degree programs. The test was developed in 1959 to measure the academic abilities of prospective college students and provided an alternative to the SAT. The ACT is a two-hour and fifty-five-minute multiple-choice exam that measures English, mathematics, reading, and science reasoning skills. Students are also required to complete two questionnaires that cover the courses they have taken, their grades and activities, and a standardized interest inventory. The test battery includes four parts: (1) a 45-minute, 75-item English test; (2) a 60-minute, 60-item mathematics test; (3) a 35-minute, 40-item reading test; and (4) a 35-minute, 40-item science reasoning test. Each of the tests is scored on a scale from one to thirty-six; the four scores are combined into a composite score of one to thirty-six. Most students who take the test score within the range of seventeen to twenty-three.
Most students take the ACT during the spring of their junior year or at the beginning of their senior year. Students are allowed to take the test more than once, and most colleges and universities count the highest score reported. Students may designate the colleges and universities to which their scores should be reported.
The SAT
The SAT, formerly called the Scholastic Aptitude Test and later the Scholastic Assessment Test, is an examination that is required by some of the higher education institutions within the United States for admission to their undergraduate degree programs. The SAT dates to the early 1900s when Ivy League schools formed the College Entrance Examination Board (College Board). The purpose of the board was to simplify the application process for students who were required to take a different entrance exam for each college they applied to. The SAT was designed as a standardized entrance exam for the College Board that required students to write out answers and compose essays.
In the early 1990s the test was redesigned to measure verbal and mathematical reasoning through multiple-choice questions. The revised SAT includes two separate divisions of the exam: the SAT I, which is a general test of verbal and math ability, and the SAT II, which tests knowledge in specialized subjects chosen by the student. The verbal and math portion of the test devotes seventy-five minutes to the verbal section and sixty minutes to the mathematics section. The verbal portion comprises three kinds of questions, as noted by Alexandra Beatty and colleagues in 1998: (1) analogy questions, which assess "knowledge of the meaning of words," ability to see a relationship in a pair of words, and the ability to recognize a similar or parallel relationship; (2) sentence completion questions, which assess "knowledge of the meaning of words" and "ability to understand how the different parts of a sentence fit logically together"; and (3) critical reading questions, which assess "ability to read and think carefully about several reading passages" (p. 18).
The mathematics section of the test assesses how well the students understand mathematics, how well they can apply what is known to new situations, and how well they are able to use the knowledge they have acquired to solve difficult mathematical problems. Each of the sections generates a score on a scale of 200 to 800, with the combined scores ranging from 400 to 1,600. Nationwide, average scores on both the verbal and math sections of the test are approximately 500.
Test Scores and Their Relationship to Admissions Selectivity
There is some misunderstanding pertaining to the validity and importance of college entrance test scores. While test scores weigh heavily in admissions decisions, they are not the only variable that is considered in admitting a student to even the most selective institution of higher learning. Most colleges and universities use the test scores as a means of assessing a candidate for admission. Other criteria included in this assessment are the high school grade point average (GPA), rank in class, record of extracurricular and service activities, letters of recommendation, applicant's essay, evidence of persistence, and interviews, which assist the college or university in determining the applicant's maturity, determination, personality, and character. High school GPAs are considered a "soft" measure because grading standards range as widely as they do in college. Nevertheless, GPAs are considered more important than test scores because they are inclusive of several years of performance, not just a few hours of testing.
The combination of high school GPAs and ACT or SAT test scores is very useful in determining admissions because it provides different kinds of information about the academic performance of students. Test scores and GPAs provide reliable and efficient information that is very useful to many admissions counselors. Test scores were not designed, however, to be a comprehensive approach to all factors that influence success in college. Admissions personnel rely as much on high school GPAs or class rank as they do on test scores, and the predictor of college success is higher for both numbers together than for either one alone.
The ACT and the SAT can be very helpful in assisting colleges in admissions selectivity when there are more applicants than the college can accept. The colleges believe that the tests are one excellent means of helping them to make a better selection of the candidates who apply. For instance, colleges that specialize in the liberal arts and humanities would seek students with higher scores in verbal aptitude and lower scores in mathematics aptitude, whereas engineering colleges would seek students with high scores in mathematics aptitude and lower scores in verbal aptitude.
Over the years, college entrance tests have improved considerably. Colleges and universities have determined that students who do well on the tests have the ability to succeed in college. These tests, however, are indicators only of a student's ability to do college work; they cannot measure perseverance and interest in learning.
See also: College Admissions; College Entrance Examination Board, The; College Financial Aid; College Search and Selection.
bibliography
National Research Council. Steering Committee for the Workshop on Higher Education Admissions. 1998. Myths and Tradeoffs: The Role of Tests in Undergraduate Admissions, ed. Alexandra Beatty, M.R.C. Greenwood, and Robert L. Linn. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.
Owen, David. 1999. None of the Above: The Truth behind the SATs, revised edition. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
Wechsler, Louis K.; Blum, Martin; and Friedman, Sidney. 1967. College Entrance Examinations. New York: Barnes and Noble.
Susan West
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Coronation Enters Into Memorandum of Understanding With Jinchuan Group Ltd. of China
Newspaper article from: CCNMatthews Newswire; 10/30/2007; 700+ words
; ...Marketwire - Oct. 30, 2007) - Coronation Minerals Inc. (TSX VENTURE:CMV)("Coronation") is pleased to announce that it has...in connection with the advancement of Coronation 's Wellgreen and Copper River properties...
|
|
Coronation Mails Special Meeting Material for Private Placement by the Jinchuan Group Ltd. of China
Newspaper article from: CCNMatthews Newswire; 2/12/2008; 700+ words
; ...Marketwire - Feb. 12, 2008) - Coronation Minerals Inc. (TSX VENTURE:CMV) ("Coronation") is pleased to announce that it has...to approve Jinchuan's investment in Coronation will be held on March 3, 2008. As set...
|
|
Thys Du Toit: CEO, Coronation Fund Managers.
News Wire article from: Africa News Service; 6/11/2003; 700+ words
; ...Thys du Toit, chief executive of Coronation Fund Managers is with us. Let...backtrack a little Thys, if we can. Coronation Holdings, a company listed on...relooked at. Why was it decided that Coronation Holdings would be delisted and...
|
|
George I's coronation throne: Adam Bowett describes a major new discovery: the throne made by the royal joiner Richard Roberts for the coronation in 1714 of George I, one of only a handful of English coronation thrones to have survived.
Magazine article from: Apollo; 1/1/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...William IV in 1830, each coronation required the Wardrobe...still plays its part in coronations at Westminster Abbey, the thrones used at the coronations of English monarchs...published an account of the coronation thrones of George III...
|
|
ITV.COM & ITV Studios Unveil Major New Coronation Street Online Store Launches Coronation Street Romanian Holiday on DVD.
M2 Presswire; 10/26/2009; 700+ words
; ...COM & ITV Studios Unveil Major New Coronation Street Online Store Launches Coronation Street Romanian Holiday on DVD(C)1994...launched its new, direct-to-customer Coronation Streetonline store ITV.com/Corrie. The...
|
|
Guyana Goldfields Inc. Calls Special Meeting of the Shareholders of Coronation Minerals
Newspaper article from: CCNMatthews Newswire; 1/28/2008; 700+ words
; ...Guyana") announced today that, in its capacity as a shareholder of Coronation Minerals Inc. ("Coronation"), it has called a Special Meeting of the Shareholders of Coronation. The purpose of the meeting will be to remove the current Board...
|
|
Coronation Buys Stake In Redwood.
News Wire article from: Africa News Service; 7/19/2000; 700+ words
; ...Town (Business Day, July 19, 2000) Coronation Fund Managers has bought a majority...international markets. It has, via Coronation Global, bought a 65% stake in Redwood...focuses on managing multimanager funds. Coronation Fund Managers MD Thys du Toit said the...
|
|
Coronation Street 40th Birthday: WE LIVE IN CORRIE, TOO; Scotland's 'TV' Streets have same proud spirit.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland); 11/29/2000; 700+ words
; ...Byline: GARY RALSTON THE cobbles of Coronation Street have echoed for 40 years to the...addresses certainly are not. There are five Coronation Streets in Scotland and every one has...Cambusnethan near Wishaw prove charity in Coronation Street is not restricted to Vera donating...
|
|
Coronation Offers Staff Further 5 Percent of Stock.
News Wire article from: Africa News Service; 9/14/2005; 595 words
; ...Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- CORONATION Fund Managers is selling a further 5...number of shares staff have bought in Coronation over the past year to 26%. The sale...staff in January. Also in January, Coronation sold 10% of Coronation Investment Management...
|
|
Joint press release - Coronation Minerals Inc./Guyana Goldfields Inc. acquisition of remaining 50% of Coppermine River Project.
News Wire article from: CNW Group; 11/6/2008; 700+ words
; ...2008 (Canada NewsWire via COMTEX) -- Coronation Minerals Inc. (TSX-V: CMV) ("Coronation") and Guyana Goldfields Inc. (TSX...the "Coppermine Agreement") between Coronation and Coppercorp Inc. ("CCI"), a wholly...
|
|
coronations
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History
coronations Though the monarch...predecessor, the coronation is a public avowal...Consequently, coronations followed accessions...Cenwulf . The coronation of Edgar at Bath...but all later coronations have taken place...
|
|
coronation
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
coronation ceremony of crowning and anointing a sovereign on his...possibly even divine) character. In England, from the coronation (973) of Edgar, the ceremony included a coronation oath, anointment, investiture, enthronement, and...
|
|
Coronation rite in England
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Coronation rite in England. It falls into three...of the sovereign; 3. the vesting, coronation, and enthronement, followed by the...The earliest surviving rite for the coronation of an English king dates from the 9th...
|
|
Coronation Concerto
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Coronation Concerto. Nickname of Mozart's pf. conc. No.26 in D, K537, perf. Frankfurt, 1790, on occasion of coronation of Leopold II but probably begun 1787 and previously perf. by Mozart in Dresden in April 1789.
|
|
Coronation Mass
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Coronation Mass. Mozart's Mass in C, K317, comp. 1779 in Salzburg. So nicknamed because Salieri directed a perf. at the coronation of Leopold II in 1791 in Prague.
|