Saturday 20 February 2016

What does the new SAT mean for you

How and why SAT is changing SAT (General) -- the international entrance exam for college admissions (undergrad) is taken the world over by over 1.6 million students, including about 300, 000 international students.
The exam, to be held in March 2016, is poised for a makeover, ten years after the last transformation. And, the changes are for real.
Although SAT has no specific eligibility area, it is typically taken by students in their 11th or 12th grades
What do they hold in store for the test-taker -- 17 to 18-year-olds?
The changes
Let's take a look at the changes in the exam:
  • Equal weightage now for Language and Math sections: 800 each in place of 1600 for Language (800 Reading + 800 Writing) and 800 in Math earlier, to give a 1600 point scale in place of the 2400 point scale.
  • Sub-scores made available, in addition to the composite score .
  • No negative marking, thus encouraging an informed guess.
  • Four options in place of five for multiple-choice questions.
  • Essay writeup turned into a separate section and made optional; now testing logical argumentation rather than language ability (The onus for requirement of essay placed on colleges; the higher ranked the college, the more likely it is to insist on essay appraisal.)
  • More focussed Math test, introducing 'Passport to Advanced Math' and emphasising 'Heart of Algebra', apart from Problem Solving and Data Analysis
  • Emphasis on logical and problem-solving skills in Math, based on real-life situations, rather than on computational skills.
  • Clear segregation of Math section (20 Q) in which a calculator is not allowed.
  • Reading section and Writing and Language sections combined to make one test (200 to 800 marks).
  • Vocabulary-based questions taken out of the Language test; Writing and Language ability tested only as part of long texts (400 to 450 word passages); in short every single Language question is passage-based (no short texts)
  • Critical Reading replaced with Evidence Based Reading with equal number of texts based on social sciences, natural sciences, humanities, and prose/literature
What is the importance of these changes?
Do they make it easier for the test-taker to crack SAT and score well; or do they make it more challenging?
Well, only time will tell.
One thing is for sure. At least in the short run, students are going to find it very difficult.
Reason? They have no prep material, or not enough prep material, or rather not enough validated prep material.
Even the College Board is unable to provide enough. Perhaps it will have some validated material after one year. What till then?
That brings us to an important question.
Why this change?
Well, the College Board would say it is trying to keep pace with the dynamic educational environment.
The requirements of college education have changed; and so have the curriculum. Yet there is more to it than meets the eye.
For years, SAT (General) has been losing ground to ACT (American College Testing). It's like Pepsi playing one up on Coke and Coke trying to set eyes on what Pepsi is up to.

No comments:

Post a Comment