The SAT’s Comeback Is Good News for Minority Students

Grokmaster

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Contrary to racist left lies.


Leftninnies prefer unqualified students to be admitted to colleges and then flunking out miserably.




The SAT’s Comeback Is Good News for Minority Students​

Standardized admissions tests have proved especially good at predicting performance of black college applicants.​


Standardized admissions tests have proved especially good at predicting performance of black college applicants.

The University of Texas at Austin’s decision this week to follow Brown, Dartmouth, Georgetown and several other top schools in reinstating standardized tests as an admission requirement is worth applauding. It’s also a reminder of the absurdity of expecting racial balance in outcomes this far down the academic stream.

For decades colleges and universities have relied on SAT and ACT scores to guide admissions decisions. When testing centers closed during the pandemic, however, many of the most selective schools decided to make the exams optional. Opposition to standardized testing isn’t new, but detractors received a big boost following the murder of George Floyd and the blossoming of trendy “antiracist” initiatives. They added the exams to an endless list of major barriers to racial equity. “Standardized tests have become the most effective racist weapon ever devised to objectively degrade Black and brown minds and legally exclude their bodies from prestigious schools,” Ibram X. Kendi, author of “How to Be an Antiracist,” wrote in October 2020.





 
Contrary to racist left lies.


Leftninnies prefer unqualified students to be admitted to colleges and then flunking out miserably.




The SAT’s Comeback Is Good News for Minority Students​

Standardized admissions tests have proved especially good at predicting performance of black college applicants.​


Standardized admissions tests have proved especially good at predicting performance of black college applicants.

The University of Texas at Austin’s decision this week to follow Brown, Dartmouth, Georgetown and several other top schools in reinstating standardized tests as an admission requirement is worth applauding. It’s also a reminder of the absurdity of expecting racial balance in outcomes this far down the academic stream.

For decades colleges and universities have relied on SAT and ACT scores to guide admissions decisions. When testing centers closed during the pandemic, however, many of the most selective schools decided to make the exams optional. Opposition to standardized testing isn’t new, but detractors received a big boost following the murder of George Floyd and the blossoming of trendy “antiracist” initiatives. They added the exams to an endless list of major barriers to racial equity. “Standardized tests have become the most effective racist weapon ever devised to objectively degrade Black and brown minds and legally exclude their bodies from prestigious schools,” Ibram X. Kendi, author of “How to Be an Antiracist,” wrote in October 2020.






Yeah, man! Educating all these scary minorities is how we're going to replace all the trump voters!
 
Is the SAT a perfect test? No. But it's been used for decades because it's been shown to 1) best help identify how a given student will do at a particular University and 2) help identify 'underrepresented' students and allow them an opportunity they wouldn't have otherwise gotten

Post George Floyd, in the name of equity, many (top) Universities moved away from the SAT. But what they found is there's a reason they've used the test for decades and that's why they are bringing it back.
 
I'm open to hearing the argument for those who are anti-SAT's.

One of them I've read is we should put more emphasis on grades. The challenge there of are a couple fold. One is obviously grade inflation and not every school grades the exact same way. The other is some schools are more difficult than others. So yes a kid may have a 4.0 GPA but their level of knowledge isn't near the same as someone who gets a 4.0 somewhere else. You then put that former student in an elite school and they are in way over their way with a high probability of dropping out. Are you doing that kid any favors by putting them in that situation?
 
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