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Perverting the SAT
MrEdCo update ^ | 7/5/02 | Julie M. Quist

Posted on 07/07/2002 9:16:11 AM PDT by attagirl

July 5, 2002

The SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) has been used by colleges for many years to predict the success of students in college. Colleges have found SATs to be an effective tool in measuring college aptitude, that is, the ability to do college work. Since colleges are interested in admitting those students who will be successful in post-secondary work, the SAT has been one of the most widely used college aptitude tests in the nation.

An aptitude test is different from an achievement test. An achievement test looks at what a student has accomplished. An aptitude test tries to predict what a student will accomplish, that is, graduate successfully from college. An achievement test looks at the past. An aptitude test looks at the future.

Last month the Trustees of the College Board for the SAT voted to change the SAT from an aptitude test to an achievement test ("College Board to Vote on Overhauling SAT I, Adding Writing Section," Washington Post). The changes are described as "the most significant overhaul in the 76-year history of the nation's most widely used such test." With these changes, the SAT will be redefined as something entirely different from what it has been.

David Jacob, spokesman for the College Board, the nonprofit higher education association that owns the SAT, said:

"The overall objective is to align the test more closely with what is taught in school today..."

In other words, the SAT will now test a student's achievement in K-12 school. That is, it will measure how well the student has absorbed the curriculum the school system has provided.

The SAT Board is also dropping the entire SAT analogies section of the test because of criticism that word analogies "are not taught in school." The word analogies are being dropped because they measure aptitude, not achievement.

Why would the SAT, which has been highly accurate as a college aptitude test, entirely redefine itself?

The answer to that question can be found by looking at the new federal curriculum, the "national standards" that all students in public K-12 schools must now, by federal law, know and be able to do." (See the federal No Child Left Behind legislation and its curricular mandates)

The National Standards for Civics Education, developed and distributed by the Center for Civic Education with funding and authorization granted by federal education law, under "Audiences and uses of the National Standards," state:

"Assessment specialists. Standards are essential to the development of assessment programs designed to determine acceptable levels of performance."

("National Standards for Civics and Government, Part VI," )

In other words, assessments will measure curriculum (civics education identifies itself as central to all other curriculum) that must match the new federal curriculum. The national norm- referenced tests, such as the Iowa Basics, are being required to align their content with the new mandated federal curriculum. All state assessments are being aligned with the new federal curriculum. The SAT is now also being aligned with the new federal curriculum. (See "How did We Get a Federal Curriculum?" February 13, 2002, )

The implications of this realignment of the SAT are profound. The new federal K-12 curriculum requires little more than minimum competencies in knowledge-based learning. Attitudes and beliefs are the core curriculum of the new federal standards. The federal curriculum is based on creating a new global citizen, not educating children with broad-based knowledge.

The realigned SAT will test for diversity and the acceptance of every value system and spiritual philosophy imaginable, while undermining the pride of our unique American heritage and respect for the Judeo-Christian worldview. Expect the SAT to take an approach to environmentalism that reveres the earth, but casts a hostile eye at individual ownership of private property.

The new curriculum does not admit to objective fact or "self evident truths," as our Declaration of Independence puts it. Don't expect students to know or be tested on unalienable rights of life, liberty and property as the foundations of our liberty; the basic rights have been superceded by the well-being of the group.

Required federal standards de-emphasize the knowledge that used to be considered education. Students are instead trained in skills for jobs. Such is the new alignment of the SAT.

As a consequence, the SAT realignment will recommend for advancement to post-secondary education those students who most thoroughly parrot the worldview of the now required federal curriculum. Private and homeschooled students who haven't picked up on the new curriculum will be at a distinct disadvantage.

Nonpublic educators have always prided themselves on their students out-performing public school students on the SAT. They have used high SAT scores as evidence of their success. The new SAT will dramatically change all that, because the new SAT will not be testing aptitude. It will be testing the new federal curriculum. Approximately 10% of U.S. K-12 students attend non-public schools. Unless nonpublic entities teach that curriculum, their nonpublic students will have a harder time being accepted into colleges (or qualifying for scholarships, advanced placement and the like). The new SAT will marginalize nonpublic students who do not comply with the federal curriculum.

Since the federal Goals 2000/School-to-Work laws were passed in 1994, restructuring education for ALL students in our country, the bringing of nonpublic students under its all-encompassing umbrella has been a top concern. This SAT realignment is one significant way by which the agents of change in this country will accomplish that goal.

Julie M. Quist MREdCo Vice President


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: curriculum; education; educationnews; obe; sat; testing
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To: attagirl
Gosh darn it all! These people never give up! Many parents, who are graduates of these dumbed down programs are so brainwashed they don't know the harm they are doing to their children, and our country by accepting this nonesense as the advancement of education. Gosh darn it all!
21 posted on 07/07/2002 12:18:47 PM PDT by hedgetrimmer
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To: attagirl
The SAT Board is also dropping the entire SAT analogies section of the test because of criticism that word analogies "are not taught in school." The word analogies are being dropped because they measure aptitude, not achievement.

The ability to grasp analogies (without being explicitly taught) is a measure of general intellegence.

22 posted on 07/07/2002 12:25:06 PM PDT by Salman
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To: rebooted; Eska; Salman; L_Von_Mises
Chas. Murray in the July 3 issue of the WSJ made some excellent points about the new SAT:

1. political pressure will be brought to bear if the discrepancy continues or grows in the black/white scores

2. might be ok in math/science, but in social sciences and humanities it'll spread TROUBLE (too Eurocentric, too this, too that) and may actually serve to degrade the curriculum

3. Minority kids more often go to schools that don't do a good job of teaching content

4. No way for an admissions ofcr to pick out the bright students from the ones that get A's for all the wrong reason

5. White students in rural schools with a dearth of advanced courses and minority students from "easy A" schools will both suffer.

6. In fact, good schools will become even more important. The poorer student will suffer the most.

Salmon, I think the fact that this happened at the same time the Supreme Ct. ruled favorably on vouchers will serve to hurt everyone.

Well, everyone...we'll do what we can in our own little sphere of influence. Thanks for caring!

23 posted on 07/07/2002 3:53:45 PM PDT by attagirl
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To: ClearCase_guy
what does bttt mean?
24 posted on 07/07/2002 3:54:24 PM PDT by attagirl
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To: *Education News; madfly
.
25 posted on 07/07/2002 5:56:45 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: attagirl
Thanks for the ping
bttt = bump to the top
of the latest posts comments list so that another freeper might notice the thread, a sign of approval.
26 posted on 07/07/2002 6:00:42 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: attagirl
Please forward to your do-nothing Board of Ed members

I'm not sure they know how to read well enough to get through this article. Their attention span may also be too short.

27 posted on 07/07/2002 6:03:37 PM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: CWRWinger
The new federal K-12 curriculum requires little more than minimum competencies in knowledge-based learning.

Thereby ensuring "no child left behind", for a relatively small taxpayer contribution. How noble.

28 posted on 07/09/2002 8:51:26 PM PDT by Osinski
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To: Osinski
for a relatively small taxpayer contribution

It's not a small contribution, it's a rip-off. If you know of someone who works for the public schools, ask them about all the 'new programs' public schools 'try out' every year. It will make your head spin. They waste incredible amounts of our money on 'junk education programs'.

29 posted on 07/10/2002 4:38:13 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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To: CWRWinger
I was attempting to be facetious with the "relatively small" euphemism. In fact, it's relatively large. We are paying out the wazoo for big government and all the waste and corruption and decay that accompanies it.
30 posted on 07/14/2002 10:59:12 AM PDT by Osinski
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To: Osinski
I just heard a report this morning that 'science' books will have to be rewritten now that this so-called 16 million year old skull has been 'found'.

All I hear is the sound of cash registers ringing at the school text book companies. Now all the text book salesmen will show up at the school boards' doors wanting more orders.

I can almost hear their pitch, "You don't want any child to be left behind now do you? The science books we sold you last fall are obsolete due to this amazing discovery." (sarcasm intended)

31 posted on 07/14/2002 11:50:26 AM PDT by CWRWinger
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