by Stephanie Lundquist-Arora
As published in iWFeatures
Several universities have recently reversed policies put into place during the pandemic to make standardized tests optional for applicants. At the end of May, Yale joined all the other Ivy League universities, in addition to Stanford and Caltech, in announcing its reinstated SAT or ACT test requirement for future admissions cycles.
In the spring of 2020, when testing centers nationwide closed at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, hundreds of universities understandably adopted test-optional policies so that students unable to take standardized exams would not be disadvantaged in the admissions process. However, many institutions extended these policies for multiple years as a way to increase diversity in admissions.
The University of California (UC) system went further, adopting a โtest-blindโ policy under which standardized test scores are not considered, even when applicants choose to submit them.
Spoiler alert: Itโs not working out so well for them.
A letter signed by thousands of UC faculty to bring back standardized testing states, โ[I]n the last five years, the number of students whose mathematics skills fall below high school level increased nearly thirtyfold; moreover, 70% of those students fall below middle school levels, reaching roughly one in twelve members of the entering cohort.โ
Perhaps this helps explain why, according to an admissions officer last month, Purdue Universityโhome to one of the nationโs premier engineering programs and a school that requires applicants to submit standardized test scoresโconsistently attracts a large number of out-of-state applicants from California.
(more…)