Test-Optional Admissions Hurt Poor Kids
A new working paper from Dartmouth College researchers provides more evidence that ditching the SAT hurts disadvantaged college applicants.

A new working paper from Dartmouth College researchers is providing yet more evidence that test-optional college admissions ended up hurting the very disadvantaged students the policy change was meant to help. Instead of boosting the chances of low-income or first-generation students, researchers found that not sending in their scores dramatically reduced their chances of admission.
"Under test score optional policies, less advantaged applicants who are high achieving submit test scores at too low a rate, significantly reducing their admissions chances; such applicants increase their admissions probability by a factor of 3.6x (from 2.9 percent to 10.2 percent) when they report their scores," reads the paper's abstract. "Much more than commonly understood, elite institutions interpret test scores in the context of background, and availability of test scores on an application can promote rather than hinder social mobility."
Following pandemic lockdowns that made standardized test-taking difficult, many colleges and universities switched to test-optional admissions, in which students were no longer required to send their SAT or ACT scores along with their applications. The change stuck around, with more than 2,100 of around 2,600 four-year colleges currently using test-optional or test-free admissions. The motivation for this change was rooted in a belief that standardized tests are biased against disadvantaged students—forgetting, however, that other measures like essays and grades also correlate with family income. Further, test scores have consistently been shown to accurately predict students' future academic performance.
"We find that test scores are strongly predictive of academic success and are significantly more predictive than other measures, such as high school GPA. Moreover, the relationship between test scores and academic success is similarly strong across income and demographic groups," the researchers note.
While many elite colleges have already reversed course upon realizing that test-optional admissions actually resulted in less diverse freshman classes, others have been slow to get rid of test-optional admissions. This latest paper, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, found that the test-optional policy encouraged disadvantaged applicants to not submit their scores, even if they had relatively high scores.
This tendency, according to the researchers, likely comes from disadvantaged (first generation, or from a low-income town or high school) students believing that they should not submit their test scores unless they are well within the range of accepted Dartmouth applicants. However, disadvantaged students seem to be evaluated differently than regular applicants. A low-income student with a 1400 SAT score, for example, might be perceived as a "diamond in the rough," even if his or her score is well below even the 25th percentile score for admitted students.
"The finding that students with different backgrounds submit scores at about the same rate makes sense given the limited information students have on what is interpreted as a competitive score," the paper reads. "However, students would not know the method in which the Admissions Office uses SAT scores in context and the degree to which a 1400 might be a very competitive score for an applicant coming from a less resourced high school or a high school with lower test scores or that offers few AP classes."
Essentially, colleges aren't judging disadvantaged students by the same standards as other students. But disadvantaged students don't assume this, leading to them not submitting their scores under the belief that their high but not incredibly high scores will hurt them. That means that if elite colleges really want more diverse student populations, they should ditch test-optional admissions and start asking students to fork over their test scores.
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Hello my fellow kids...
All woke bullshit hurts poor kids.
Precise and concise.
Water is wet.
If you need a sciency study to point out the meritocracies are fairer than feelz, you should restart your education at the K level, because I doubt you're gonna make it to 1.
Huh, I've been out of the news cycle. I didn't realize that a border patrol officer near the Canadian border was killed... I didn't know one of the killers hailed from my state which gives it a 79.457% chance that they're part of the LGBTQI2MAP+ crowd.
Welcome back.
By the way, Trump won the election, and a few things have changed.
I noticed. The people in my house that do the jobs that Nick Gillespie won't do haven't shown up recently, so I figured something was up.
The people in my house that do the jobs that Nick Gillespie won't do haven't shown up recently, so I figured something was up.
*sigh*... guess it's back to hiring orphans to clean my keyboard after spit takes.
That's a useful skill that orphan can carry with him for life.
God bless you mad. You're helping build a better future.
Orphans need something to do when they're not cleaning monocles. Idle hands and whatnot.
Did anybody believe that a "Holistic Admissions Process" would not benefit a kid whose parents had enough money to bankroll the kid's extracurricular activities and stints as a volunteer in 3rd world countries?
if you are too dumb to go, then you are too dumb to go. period.
>A new working paper from Dartmouth College researchers provides more evidence that ditching the SAT hurts disadvantaged college applicants.
Does it hurt them though?
Or does it allow people who are not ready to get in - and then fail out - while those who are ready aren't affected at all?
I'm not sure the test score requirement changes the math.
Kids with lower scores simply won't apply at all.
ENB freakout coming. Trump banning child castration.
Pretty sure I heard a few of my leftist neighbors screaming and crying when it was announced. More wailing when the buyout offer hit the news.
Lovely evening.
Essentially, colleges aren't judging disadvantaged students by the same standards as other students.
...
Thomas Sowell and Clarence Thomas said this 40 years ago !!!!
I taught for 10 years and 3 facts stand out
---letting poor students in hurts the best students
---- Poor students don't know how to learn and this is like learning how to shoot during your first gun duel
--- Even if they perdure to graduation they are not employable even at minimum wage.
Now this is just me: I think one of the great fuelers of crime in this country is PUBLIC SCHOOLS. IT takes dough to live and if you graduate high school and don't read (can't read), can't add up numbers, and couldnb't scribble anythong more complex than a bank holdup note, where do you think you end up
Which seems obvious. The advantage of standardized testing is that it's standardized, meaning someone with academic ability can compete fairly, regardless of background. Granted, some students from wealthier families spend on SAT and ACT coaching classes, but students from poorer families can get the same level of gains just by buying a test prep book and taking a few practice exams. I raised my score by 100 points from the PSAT to the SAT, and only spent 20 bucks on a prep book.
Without the standardized test results, admissions decisions depend more on letters of recommendation, school activities, and "enrichment" activities, all of which favor students from wealthier families. Kids going to better schools have teachers who are more accustomed to writing successful letters of recommendation. Kids from wealthier families can afford to (and are encouraged to) be involved in more after-school activities, especially those involving travel. And kids from wealthier families can afford to go on international volunteer trips. One new wrinkle is high school gets getting academic papers "published" by submitting them to an academic paper mill where it's pay-to-play.
A lot of use of the term "disadvantaged" in that article.
How is that determined?
If your name is Malik or Tanisha, and your father is a CEO making 500k, are you "disadvantaged"?