Posted on 04/23/2024 7:59:13 AM PDT by JSM_Liberty
Since the 2021 admissions cycle, Cornell University’s eight undergraduate colleges have adopted test-optional and test-blind policies. However, starting in the 2026 admissions cycle, all colleges will mandate prospective students to submit a standardized test score with their applications.
Although colleges will continue test-optional and test-blind policies for the Fall 2025 admissions cycle, students are encouraged to submit SAT and/or ACT scores. Cornell initially suspended standardized test requirements for applicants in April 2020 due to SAT and ACT test cancellations due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Many peer institutions — including Yale and Dartmouth — recently announced that they would reinstate the standardized testing requirement. Other universities including Columbia stated that they would remain test-optional.
The University decided to reinstate its standardized testing requirement based on evidence from a multi-year study conducted by the University’s Task Force on Standardized Testing in Admissions. Leaderboard 2
The task force found no clear indication that reduced testing policies brought a major increase in diversity and instead found a slight decrease in diversity along some metrics.
When the policy was first implemented in 2021, the percentage of Black, Hispanic and Indigenous students and first-generation students in the first-year class increased compared to 2020.
However, as scores continued to not be required from 2021 to 2023, the percent of students who identify as Black, Hispanic and/or Indigenous in the first-year classes decreased from 28 percent to 25 percent. Standardized test scores can give the admissions committees a better understanding of the students’ academic potential when contextualized to students’ backgrounds, including the high school they attend and their familial income, according to the task force.
Under current test policies, students may not submit test scores when they fall below the average admitted Cornell student scores, despite having scores that would advantage them in the admissions process once contextualized to social factors.
The report also highlighted that based on previous studies at Cornell and elsewhere, SAT scores can help inform how first-year students will handle academic rigor, especially in their first semester. Higher SAT scores indicate that a student is more likely to stay in “good academic standing” and maintain continuous enrollment.
Admissions officers more often selected students who submitted a test score compared to those who did not in test-optional years, according to the task force. While only 28 percent of applicants submitted a test score in fall 2022, 44 percent of admitted students submitted a test score.
However, the report noted that this difference could also reflect that students who report test scores tend to have a stronger application overall.
Still, regression models that estimate admissions probability — which control for various factors such as high school GPA and additional student and high school characteristics — estimated that submitting scores “significantly increases the likelihood of admission” in test-optional colleges.
According to the task force, this finding underscores the importance of admissions officers utilizing test scores to inform their decisions.
“While it may seem counterintuitive, considering these test scores actually promotes access to students from a wider range of backgrounds and circumstances,” Provost Michael Kotlikoff wrote in the announcement.
I suspect they are getting quiet pushback from faculty members who are tired of trying to teach morons.
Dats racist /s
Screening to let you know you might spend a lot of money and still wash out isn’t a bad thing.
This is another anti-overpriviliged white folk scam. All of these kids who thought their ticket to heaven was by riding the DEI scam, spending all the time they should have been studying doing “social work,” supporting green energy scams, supporting equity for raping, murdering terrorists, and that sort of thing, are going to be at a huge disadvantage. They have all been scammed thinking that study is passe.
The IQ-Gap can’t be ignored. How to deal with it will continue to be a problem.
Ithaca is the City of Evil bump.
Anyone with 2 brain cells to rub together could have told you that eliminating standardized tests for admission was going to end poorly.
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