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Don't blame tests for differences in educational quality and access

The following is reprinted with permission from EdSource . Commentary from ACT CEO Marten Roorda was originally posted on December 16. I...

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The following is reprinted with permission from EdSource. Commentary from ACT CEO Marten Roorda was originally posted on December 16.

If your doctor diagnoses you with an illness, do you recommend the doctor be fired, or the thermometer be thrown away?

Recently, a lawsuit was filed against the University of California system demanding immediate elimination of the ACT test and the SAT as admission requirements. Among the assertions is that inherent biases in the development of the tests lead to lower scores for some racial/ethnic groups than for others.

It’s true that not all student groups perform the same on the ACT. But it’s false to claim that this means there is something wrong with the test. Instead, it diagnoses larger problems in the U.S. education system: problems of unequal access to a high-quality education that need to be treated.

ACT works very hard to ensure that its tests are fair to all students. Questions and passages are thoroughly evaluated at multiple stages, both internally and by diverse panels of external experts, to eliminate any potential biases in content, wording, or cultural assumptions.

Questions are also evaluated statistically for evidence of differential performance by one racial/ethnic group or gender during preliminary testing; when test questions show such evidence, they are removed from further consideration. This helps guarantee that students with the same level of ability will have the same probability of answering any given question correctly, regardless of their backgrounds.

The fairness of ACT scores is also evaluated by examining the relationships between scores and educational outcomes for various student groups. This research has shown consistently that ACT scores accurately predict success in college, not just in the first year but throughout—in terms of grades, retention rate (the percentage of students who continue college after their first year), and graduation rate.

The majority of existing achievement gaps across racial/ethnic groups and annual family income ranges can be attributed to differences in high school course taking and grades, school characteristics, and other factors such as how much post-high school education students say they want.

Even Saul Geiser, a former director of admissions research for the UC system who has been critical of using the SAT or ACT for admissions purposes, wrote: “The growing correlation between race and test scores over the past 25 years reflects the growing segregation of Latino and black students in California’s poorest, lowest-performing schools.”

Nearly every standardized assessment of academic preparation—not only the ACT and the SAT but also Smarter Balanced and the Nation’s Report Card—reports similar achievement gaps across student groups. Such differences also emerge in measures used in hiring, certification, and professional licensure in thousands of occupations—and have for decades.

What’s more, high school grades, college grades, college retention and college completion all show similar group differences.

But standardized tests can do something that other indicators can’t. High school grades reflect conditions within a single school. Standardized tests offer a common yardstick across schools. Standardized tests can both reveal and help minimize the impact of grade inflation, as well as create comparability within the fragmented American educational system.

ACT research shows that test scores and high school grades each provide important yet unique information, and that combined together they more accurately predict college performance than either alone.

Why eliminate valuable information from the admission process? ACT advocates for using multiple measures — including test scores, courses taken, grades earned, class rank, etc. — to better understand students’ academic strengths and weaknesses and to identify those who may need additional supports and services when they get to campus.

Blaming tests for differences in educational quality and access doesn’t eliminate or reduce these inequities any more than throwing away the thermometer gets rid of a fever. It’s time we start focusing our attention on what matters: making sure that all students have rigorous academic preparation and access to high-quality teaching and learning.


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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning and Boys & Girls Clubs of America Team Up to Help More Students Go to College

IOWA CITY, Iowa— ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning and Boys & Girls Clubs of America are proud to announce a partnership that aims...

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IOWA CITY, Iowa—ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning and Boys & Girls Clubs of America are proud to announce a partnership that aims to help more students from underserved populations go to college by directly providing fee waivers for the ACT® test to eligible students from low-income families. The ACT measures what students have learned in school to determine their academic readiness for college.

This initiative is needed to help more students have a fair chance to achieve success in education and the workplace. ACT provides fee waivers to students from low-income families to take the ACT for free up to two times, but many eligible students either don’t apply or don’t use their fee waivers.

Specifically, as part of this initiative, Boys & Girls Clubs in California, Florida, Illinois, New York, Tennessee and Texas will seek to reach 2,000 underserved students with two fee waivers, which include free score reports and free online test prep. Additionally, ACT will provide webinar support to the Clubs in reaching students eligible for the waivers.

“This partnership further supports our efforts to close gaps in equity, opportunity and achievement for underserved populations,” said Jim Larimore, chief officer for ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning. “We’re committed to removing cost barriers and other obstacles that prevent students from understanding their current readiness for college-level work and what they can do to be better prepared as they make the transition to postsecondary opportunities. We’re delighted that Boys & Girls Clubs of America—whose members are in communities making a difference every day—is our partner in this mission of helping people achieve education success.”

Boys & Girls Clubs provide a safe, affordable place for kids and teens during critical out-of-school time. They offer life-changing programs and services to youth across America and on U.S. military installations worldwide.

There are 187 Clubs on Native lands, making Boys & Girls Clubs the largest youth development provider to Native communities. Twenty-six percent of Club members are African American and 23 percent are Hispanic. The majority of Club members (61 percent) qualify for free or reduced-price school lunches.

By partnering with the Clubs to distribute fee waivers, ACT is ensuring that high-needs populations are getting support where they already are and empowering them for success.

“ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning is an important source for research that focuses on closing gaps in equity, and we’re excited this partnership will further all of our efforts to improve access to learning and achievement,” said Elizabeth Fowlkes, senior vice president of youth development with Boys & Girls Clubs of America. “At Boys & Girls Clubs we believe that, no matter the circumstances that surround youth, they should have the same access to opportunities as their peers, and we are committed to ensuring young people have the support they need to secure post-secondary success.”

To receive a fee waiver, a student must be currently enrolled in high school in the 11th or 12th grade in the US, US territories, or Puerto Rico and meet one or more of the indicators of economic need.

An ACT fee waiver covers the registration and late fees for either the ACT (no writing) or the ACT with writing. Students who register for the ACT test with fee waivers also automatically receive free access to ACT’s paid test preparation tools and can send score reports for free to up to 20 colleges.

About ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning


ACT’s Center for Equity in Learning focuses on closing gaps in equity, opportunity and achievement for underserved populations and working learners. Through purposeful investments, employee engagement, and thoughtful advocacy efforts, the Center supports innovative partnerships, actionable research, initiatives, campaigns, and programs to further ACT’s mission of helping people achieve education and workplace success. http://equityinlearning.act.org/

About ACT


ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

About Boys & Girls Clubs of America


For more than 150 years, Boys & Girls Clubs of America (BGCA.org) has enabled young people most in need to achieve great futures as productive, caring, responsible citizens. Today, more than 4,600 Clubs serve over 4.7 million young people through Club membership and community outreach. Clubs are located in cities, towns, public housing and on Native lands throughout the country, and serve military families in BGCA-affiliated Youth Centers on U.S. military installations worldwide. They provide a safe place, caring adult mentors, fun and friendship, and high-impact youth development programs on a daily basis during critical non-school hours. Club programs promote academic success, good character and citizenship, and healthy lifestyles. In a Harris Survey of alumni, 54 percent said the Club saved their lives. National headquarters are located in Atlanta. Learn more at on Facebook and Twitter.


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Sanchez named ACT President for Learning

IOWA CITY, Iowa—Jonell Sanchez, an internationally recognized leader in education and business, has been named president of learning at A...

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IOWA CITY, Iowa—Jonell Sanchez, an internationally recognized leader in education and business, has been named president of learning at ACT. The position is a new one at ACT and reflects the company’s transformation to a global nonprofit organization integrating solutions that span learning, measurement and navigation.

The position is also a testament to Sanchez’s personal and professional experience, spanning his learning journey as a childhood immigrant from Cuba and English as a Second Language (ESL) student from an underserved community to his professional commitment and lifelong passion for educational opportunity, access and impact at scale in the U.S. and abroad.


Learning Advocate


Sanchez comes to ACT from the National Student Clearinghouse, where he served as vice president of education solutions. The clearinghouse supports research, reporting, and data exchange needs for thousands of postsecondary institutions, K12 schools, organizations and corporations across the United States.

Previously, Sanchez served in senior positions leading education and career success at Pearson Global, Pearson North America and the College Board. His roles included strategy development and execution, establishing global and domestic partnerships, and launching adaptive online assessments, learning intervention and digital learning products.

“Jonell Sanchez has brought transformational assessment and learning technologies to thousands of K12 schools, colleges, universities and corporations,” said ACT CEO Marten Roorda. “As ACT president of learning, Jonell will work to bring integrated, personalized learning technologies to millions more students and adults so they can learn more efficiently and effectively than ever before.”

“ACT has become synonymous with education during its 60 years of service to the education community,” said Sanchez. “It’s a privilege to have the opportunity to be leading the creation of this new learning group with the talented teams at ACT as it executes a new vision for the future. The constructs of education today and what they will be in the future are drastically different from those in the past. The ability to integrate programs across the ACT Holistic Framework and provide new offerings that converge ACT’s learning assets in support of the student lifecycle positions ACT at the forefront.”

Background


Sanchez began his career in student affairs at Rutgers University and Fairleigh Dickinson University, both in New Jersey. He holds a master’s degree in International Education from New York University and a bachelor’s degree from Rutgers University. He has also studied and conducted research in Namibia and South Africa and earned a certificate from the Rutgers Eagleton Institute of Politics.

Sanchez lives in northern Virginia with his wife, Andreina, and their two children. He begins his new position at ACT on January 6.

Follow ACT

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About ACT

ACT is a mission-driven, nonprofit organization dedicated to helping people achieve education and workplace success. Grounded in 60 years of research, ACT is a trusted leader in college and career readiness solutions. Each year, ACT serves millions of students, job seekers, schools, government agencies and employers in the US and around the world with learning resources, assessments, research and credentials designed to help them succeed from elementary school through career.

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