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Mellon Foundation Funds Three-Year Study of MHC's SAT-Optional Experiment
The results are expected to interest educators nationwide, who have
been deeply engaged in the debate about the appropriate role of
standardized testing in college admissions.
For immediate release October 9, 2002
SOUTH HADLEY, MA-- Concerned over the exaggerated role of
the SAT in the college admissions process and the test’s limitations as
a predictor of student success, Mount Holyoke College in 2001 began a
five-year experiment of making the SAT optional for admission, joining
a small group of selective liberal arts colleges to do so. Now the
College has launched a three-year study to determine the effects of
that policy, through a $290,000 grant from The Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation.
“We believe that the SAT has become a negative force in higher
education, given the unwarranted centrality that the test has assumed
in college admissions nationwide,” said Jane Brown, vice president for
enrollment and college relations. “Mount Holyoke encourages 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.”
The new admission policy emphasizes 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. Admissions
officers also probe for less tangible qualities such as intellectual
curiosity, motivation, leadership, creativity, and a social conscience.
The College’s intent was to cast 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. Preliminary data from the class of 2005, the first class
admitted under the new policy, show that the College succeeded in
casting a wider net for students who, despite being disadvantaged by
the SAT, have the intellectual and motivational qualities that Mount
Holyoke requires. While nearly one in four applicants for the class of
2005 and one in three for the class of 2006 chose not to submit their
SAT scores, the new class is as academically strong as in previous
years, but decidedly more diverse.
The College has developed a three-year plan for studying the impact
of its SAT-optional policy. What effect has the policy had on the
College’s applicant pool? Why do students choose to submit, or not to
submit, their SAT scores? As a group, how do non-submitters compare to
submitters in academic performance and activities outside the
classroom? These are among the questions to be answered.
Results will be made available to the Mellon Foundation and to a
wider audience of educators nationwide, who have been closely watching
the College’s experiment. “We hope our experience will encourage other
institutions to take a critical look at standardized testing in their
admissions processes. We will be pleased to share our research with
them,” said President Joanne V. Creighton.
Elements of the research project include:
- Admission Data. The College will analyze aggregate
admission data from SAT submitters and non-submitters in order to
answer the questions: Has the change in policy resulted in changes to
the profile of Mount Holyoke’s applicant pool, admitted students, and
matriculants? What factors influence an applicant to submit or not
submit a score? And can we draw any meaningful conclusions about
non-submitters that predict whether their performance will be
quantifiably different from that of submitters over four years?
- Survey of Inquirers, Applicants, and Matriculants.
The College hopes to learn the effect of the SAT-optional policy on
those who consider Mount Holyoke but in the end do not apply or do not
matriculate. A better understanding of the motivation and strategies of
those who express interest in the College might shed more light on the
differences in submission rates that vary by income and ethnicity.
- Academic Performance. The College will track the
aggregate academic performance and extracurricular activities of
submitters and non-submitters. Academic performance will be measured by
a range of quantifiable criteria such as grade-point average and
progress toward graduation, while qualitative data will be collected on
other measures of success such as leadership roles and civic engagement.
- Persistence Study. Researchers will follow
submitters and non-submitters in an effort to better determine reasons
for success and attrition between the two groups. In-depth interviews
will be completed with a sample of student volunteers during their
first three years at the College. The data will be analyzed to
determine attrition and persistence patterns and measure the level of
engagement of both groups.
- Assessments of Admission Committee Ratings.
Without SAT scores, do admission officers have enough information to
make informed decisions? Will an applicant’s decision to withhold SAT
scores bias a reader against her application? A sampling of
applications from submitters and non-submitters will be read twice,
once with scores provided and once without. The results will be
compared to determine if there is a significant difference in ratings.
- Guidance Counselor Focus Groups. Guidance
counselors are important opinion leaders for both students and parents,
and are keenly aware of the issues related to standardized testing.
During the next three years, the College will conduct focus groups with
guidance counselors around the country to assess whether their opinions
and attitudes about the SAT change over time and whether regional
differences exist. As the SAT debate continues, guidance counselors
will be queried about how their advising practices respond to changing
admission options.
For further information, please contact Jane B. Brown, vice president for enrollment and college relations, at 413-538-2515.
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