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Abstract:The New York nonprofit College Board will include an adversity score in its SAT that will measure socioeconomic and educational privilege.
The SAT will include “adversity scores” that measure a student's privilege, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal.The score will indicate a test taker's socioeconomic status and educational access, and will only be visible to college officials.The change comes in the wake of a $25 million college admissions scandal in which wealthy parents allegedly bribed test administrators to inflate their children's test scores.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.In the aftermath of the recent $25 million college admissions scandal, the SAT will include a new measure for privilege beginning this year.Along with scores measuring math and reading comprehension, the test will include an “adversity score” that indicates a test taker's social and economic background. College Board, the New York nonprofit that administers the test, rolled out a beta version to 50 colleges last year and found it led to greater nonwhite student enrollment, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. Adversity scores will be measured on a scale of 1 to 100, with under 50 indicating privilege and over 50 indicating socioeconomic hardship. The score will be invisible to students — it will only be reported to college officials, according to The New York Times. The Journal reports that race will not be a factor in the score.Read more: Here's how people involved in the college admissions scandal may have avoided being flagged by the SAT's cheating algorithmThe number will look at 15 factors, including the crime rate in a student's neighborhood and their family's median income. College Board would not reveal the exact metrics the adversity score measures, but said it pulls from public records such as the US Census. The measure will officially roll out this year to 150 schools, and more broadly by 2020. “We are proud that results from our pilot of the tool show that using the Environment Context Dashboard makes it more likely that students who demonstrate strength and resourcefulness in overcoming challenges are more likely to be admitted to college,” David Coleman, CEO of the College Board, said in a statement to Business Insider.Outrage over the $25 million college admissions scandal that charged two college-exam administrators for taking bribes to inflate SAT and ACT scores spurred conversations around how wealthy students get an unfair advantage in the college application process. The US Department of Justice reported that parents paid $15,000 to $75,000 to alleged admissions scandal ringleader William Singer in exchange for manufactured test scores. College Board assured INSIDER that the company has an extensive process to ensure SAT scores are valid, though reports have found that superrich parents can still legally pay $300 an hour for “admissions expert consultants” or donate millions to elite colleges. College Board released a statement immediately following the scandal that promised to offer a new approach to the SAT that would take into account the inequalities students face heading into the test. “The SAT was built to break down barriers to admit students of merit, not just those with connections and influence,” Coleman had stated. “With today's grade-inflation epidemic in many wealthier schools and districts, an objective measure has never been more essential.”
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The College Board recently revealed a new "adversity score" that it plans to use as part of the SAT in order to reflect students' social background.
Rick Singer said the students didn't know about the lengths their parents took in the college-admissions scheme. But the students may have been complicit in the scam.
Rick Singer alleges the students didn't know about the lengths their parents took in the college admissions scheme. But the students may have been complicit in the scam.
Parents may have paid $25 million bribes in the college admissions scandal, but there are legal ways the wealthy can buy admission to elite colleges.