Posted on 09/27/2013 2:03:35 PM PDT by neverdem
Fewer than half of the 2013 graduating seniors who took the test got "college-ready" scores.
Of the 1.66 million high school students in the class of 2013 who took the SAT, only 43 percent were academically prepared for college-level work, according to this years SAT Report on College & Career Readiness. For the fifth year in a row, fewer than half of SAT-takers received scores that qualified them as college-ready.
The College Board considers a score of 1550 to be the College and Career Readiness Benchmark. Students who meet the benchmark(PDF) are more likely to enroll in a four-year college, more likely to earn a GPA of a B- or higher their freshman year, and more likely to complete their degree.
While some might see stagnant scores as no news, the College Board considers them a call to action. These scores can and must change and the College Board feels a sense of responsibility to help make that happen, the report said.
The report also offered insights into why some students graduated high school prepared for college and others didnt. Students in the class of 2013 who met or exceeded the benchmark were more likely to have completed a core curriculum, to have taken honors or AP courses, and to have taken higher-level mathematics courses, like precalculus, calculus, and trigonometry.
Although the SAT takers in the class of 2013 were the most diverse group of test takers ever, the report showed that minority students scores have only slightly improved in the past year.
The College Board
While 14.8 percent of African-American SAT takers met or exceeded the SAT benchmark in 2012, 15.6 percent met or exceeded the mark in 2013...
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
Do it get your daughter in SAT prep
BTW have you see LA unfied school district it is bad the IPAD they gave out to the kids beginning of school year
Half of them are MISSING
While percentages of black and Hispanics who met the SAT levels for college success (15.6% and 23.5% respectively), conspicuously absent is the percent of whites who met the levels for college success. Anyone care to speculate as to why that particular number is missing?
BTW, a little math shows that the 71% non-black, non-Hispanic group, which is composed of almost all whites and Asians had a 46% rate of exceeding the threshold of likely college success, as compared to 15.6% and 23.5% success threshold for blacks and Hispanics respectively. I guess that’s why the white/Asian success rate wasn’t published.
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