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Early Results from MHC Study Reaffirm SAT-Optional Policy
Published in the College Street Journal - March 18, 2005
Addition of Writing Section Considered Unlikely to Alter Policy
Mount Holyoke College students who chose not to submit their SAT
scores with their applications are succeeding academically, further
bolstering the College’s contention that the SAT is not essential to
making good admission decisions and has limited value as a predictor of
an individual student’s success.
Mount Holyoke in 2001 made the standardized test optional for
admission, convinced that the SAT had become a negative force in higher
education, and committed to casting a wider net for applicants with
strong academic potential and exceptional talents who may have been
previously discouraged from applying because of their performance on
the SAT. The College is now in the final year of a three-year study of
the effects of that policy, made possible by a $290,000 grant from the
Mellon Foundation.
Interim results from that study show no meaningful difference in
academic performance between students who did not submit scores and
those who did. The study shows that there is a .1 difference between
the aggregate grade point averages of submitters and non-submitters.
The difference is equivalent to approximately one letter grade in one
course over a year of study.
“The fact is that the SAT does not add enough value for us to
require students and their families to make such a large investment of
time, energy, and money in this single, high-stakes test,” said Jane B.
Brown, vice president for enrollment and college relations at Mount
Holyoke. “We would encourage high school students to focus instead on
activities that promote long-term intellectual and personal growth
rather than on time-consuming and often expensive strategies to raise
their SAT scores.”
One early result from the study confirms what has been widely
assumed: As families’ income levels rise, so too does the likelihood
that the student has had the advantage of SAT training classes or
special tutoring. More than two-thirds of prospective Mount Holyoke
students from higher-income families took an SAT preparation course,
and one in three had private tutoring.
The new SAT that will be administered on March 12 has undergone a
number of changes, most significantly the addition of an essay-writing
section. Given that Mount Holyoke has historically placed great
emphasis on the caliber of applicants’ writing and currently requires
the submission of several essays and graded writing samples, this new
section is not likely to add to the test’s value to our admission
process, Brown said. In addition, “this test is a formulaic writing
exercise and is likely to be quite coachable,” she said.
“We look at students as individuals and take into account their
academic records, their leadership abilities, and their performance
over the course of four years,” Brown said. The SAT-optional policy in
fact is simply the evolution of the College’s traditional holistic
approach to the applicant selection process that includes, among many
components, a comprehensive review of a student’s high school record,
rigorous writing requirements including several essays, and submission
of a graded paper from a high school course.
Admission officers also look for less tangible qualities such as
intellectual curiosity, motivation, leadership, creativity, and a
social conscience. The ongoing study features six major elements,
including an analysis of admission data; a survey of inquirers,
applicants, and matriculants; the tracking of submitters’ and
non-submitters’ academic performance; an in-depth persistence study
involving student volunteers; assessments of admission committee
ratings; and focus groups with guidance counselors.
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