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College Board's SAT Score Choice Debacle Should Make You Want to Take the ACT

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As you may recall, College Board announced over the summer that they would allow students to pick which SAT scores would be sent to colleges instead of forcing students to send a cumulative record their scores.  I pointed out at the time that this policy change was a pretty cynical move on College Board's part, since they killed a program in 2002 that did the exact same thing because it "hurt more students than it helped."

At the start of 2009, several colleges weighed in on the issue as well, choosing to either accept or reject the College Board's plan.  Some influential schools like Harvard accepted the new reporting standards, but others chose to reject it and have demanded that students send all of their scores. Stanford was especially public and vocal about rebuffing the Score Choice program.  The Stanford Director of Admissions, Shawn Abbott noted:

"We want to discourage students from taking the SAT more than once or twice, and believe that programs like Score Choice encourage applicants with resources to take the SAT excessively to improve their scores.  [...]  I wouldn’t agree with the notion that Score Choice relieves pressure or stress,” he said. “I would argue instead that such programs only encourage students to take more tests to improve their scores at all costs." - The Stanford Daily

To some degree, this development totally caught me by surprise.

The SAT Score Choice program is supposed to let students choose the score they want to send to the schools.  If the program isn't universal, then they aren't really choosing anything!  Instead, some schools are promising to ignore the scores they would probably chose to ignore anyway.

Look at Harvard's statement concerning Score Choice:

"Students applying to Harvard are free to use the College Board's new Score Choice option and/or a similar option already offered by ACT. Score Choice rests on the same principle that has supported our admissions process for decades — that applicants should be free to present their own best case. We have always counted an applicant's highest test scores and have allowed students to decide whether they wanted to send all their test scores." - Harvard's Website

In short, they are accepting Score Choice because they already counted your highest scores and ONLY your highest scores.  Stanford is rejecting Score Choice for the same reason that Harvard is accepting it.  They already counted ALL your scores and want to continue counting all your scores.

How should you respond to all this?  Take the ACT.  

The ACT allows you to send your single highest score to any school in the country.  It's a significantly shorter test than the SAT, clocking in at nearly an hour less with the optional essay.  Students enjoy that the ACT is direct and to the point, lacking many of the "tricky" question types that make College Board and the SAT famous.  And more importantly than anything else, the makers of the ACT aren't involved in the backroom shenanigans that surround all of this Score Choice nonsense.

So unless you fall into the small category of students who naturally test better on the SAT, now is the best time to avoid College Board (and the SAT) altogether.

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Still planning on taking the SAT?  Tell us why in the comments...

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