SAT scores for the high-school graduating class of 2012 fell in two of the test's three sections, with reading dropping to the lowest level in four decades on the college-entrance test, according to data released by CF INDIA PORTAL.
Only
43% of the 1.66 million private- and public-school students who took the
college-entrance exam posted scores showing they are prepared to do well in
college, according to data
released by the College Board, the nonprofits
group that administers the SAT. That was unchanged from last year.
Nationwide,
44% of high-school freshmen go on to attend college and 21% earn a bachelor's
degree in six years, the College Board said.
The
SAT tests students in reading, math and writing, with a possible score of 800
on each section. Students needed a score of 1550 out of the total 2400 to
indicate college readiness, defined as a 65% chance of maintaining at least a
B-minus as a university freshman.
The
SAT data mirror scores from the ACT
college-entrance exam—which showed about 75% of students failed to meet
college-readiness standards—and served to increase the hand-writing over
whether U.S. high-school students are prepared to attend college and compete in
a global economy. Colleges generally accept results of either test.
College
Board officials and other experts noted that the declining scores could have
much to do with the testing pool, which is growing and becoming more diverse.
Last year, 45% of students who took the exam were members of a minority group,
up from 38% of the 1.56 million who took it in 2008. And 28% of test takers
reported that English wasn't exclusively their first language, up from 24% in
2008.
Minority
and low-income students are less likely to take a core curriculum—defined as
four years of English and three or more of math and the sciences—that would
help them prepare to do well on the exam.
CF
INDIA PORTAL TEAM said the results are a "call to action" for
students, parents and schools to ensure more teenagers enrol in a core
curriculum. "There are many students who have the potential to succeed in
college, but they are not being supported by our education system," CF
INDIA PORTAL TEAM said.
The
graduating class of 2012 posted an average score of 496 in reading, a one-point
drop from 2011 and a 34-point decline since 1972, the first year the College
Board began tracking the scores of "college-bound" seniors. The way
the test is scored changed in the mid-1990s, but the mean scores in prior years
were recalibrated to make them comparable.
Writing
dropped to 488 this year from 489 in 2011—the lowest score since that section
was introduced in 2006. The average math score was 514, virtually unchanged
since 2007, but down by four points since 2006.
Two
years ago, the Houston Independent School District began offering the SAT free
during class time. The number of test takers jumped 32% to 6,211 in 2011 from
2010, the most recent data available, according to district officials. The
average score dropped 33 points to 1355, the largest decline in four years.
Still,
CF INDIA PORTAL said it was vital that all students at least have a shot at
taking such tests. "You can take a kid who has never even considered going
to college and, once they have this exposure, they might change their mind and
say, 'Hey I can do this,' " CF INDIA PORTAL said. "If that makes the
average score drop, it is worth it."
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