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A REVIEW OF THE USE OF STANDARDIZED TEST SCORES IN THE UNDERGRADUATE ADMISSIONS
PROCESS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
A Report to President Larry R. Faulkner
by
Task Force on Standardized
College Admissions Testing
Dr.
Bruce Walker, Chairman, Associate Vice President of Student Affairs and
Director of Admissions
Dr. Judy Ashcroft,
Associate Vice President and Director of the Division of Instructional
Innovation and Assessment
Dr.
Larry D. Carver, Professor, Department of English
Dr.
Patrick Davis, Professor, College of Pharmacy
Dr.
Lodis Rhodes, Professor, The LBJ School of Public Affairs
Gerald
Torres, LLM, Professor, School of Law
Gary M. Lavergne, Ed.S., Director of Admissions
Research
January 25, 2002
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Background
The University of Texas at Austin (UT
Austin) changed the way it admitted students beginning with the freshman class
of 1997. The development of this process was driven both by the need to manage
growing enrollments at the University and to respond to the Hopwood
decision.[i]
The new process dramatically reduces the influence of standardized test scores;
class rank is more important; and for students not automatically admitted
through the “top 10% rule” a holistic review of a student’s entire
application is factored into an admissions decision.
Nearly four years later, on February 18,
2001, Dr. Richard C. Atkinson, the President of the University of California
System, delivered the 2001 Robert H. Atwell Distinguished Lecture at the 83rd
Annual Meeting of the American Council on Education (ACE) in Washington, D.C.
His address, Standardized Tests and Access to American Universities,
sent shockwaves across university campuses throughout the United States because
he concluded, “…America’s overemphasis on the SAT is compromising our
educational system.”[ii]
Dr. Atkinson called for much of what was already implemented at UT Austin: a
“holistic” approach to defining merit. But unlike the UT Austin routine, he
also called for the use of five SAT IIs (Subject Tests) in the admissions
process instead of the more common SAT I: Reasoning Test.
In his letter of appointment to each Task
Force member, President Larry Faulkner described a limited charge: “The
objective of this group is to consider the role that standardized test scores
play in our admissions process and to insure continued fairness in this process
for undergraduates.” He
continued by stating, “I have no preconceived ideas about how strong of a
role admission tests should play and simply want an assessment of the facts
with any recommendations about their continued use.” [iii]
The
Mission of The University of Texas at Austin
It is the mission of The University of Texas
at Austin to achieve excellence in the interrelated areas of undergraduate
education, graduate education, research, and public service.[iv]
As the state’s flagship university, it has a special responsibility and
relationship with its community and state. As a major source of well-rounded,
highly educated individuals, UT Austin appreciates the crucial role it plays in
the future of the State of Texas. UT Austin is simultaneously a selective
institution, with some of America’s finest colleges and schools, and the
largest university in the United States; its influence extends well beyond the
boundaries of Texas.
The mission of the University cannot be
achieved without the exposure of its students, faculty, and staff to diversity
of talent, ideas, and people. The extent to which undergraduate students become
more able to function and contribute globally depends, in part, on their
interaction with classmates and other cohorts of differing backgrounds,
attitudes, and cultures. This crucial educational axiom is the source of the
University’s commitment to a comprehensive process of admitting students and
enrolling entering freshman classes consistent with its mission, desire, and
capacity to represent all of the people and areas of Texas—including its rich
cultural mix. In short, diversity is an educational necessity.[v]
The
Expanded Concept of Merit in the Admissions Process
The admissions process of any university is
an exercise in both selecting qualified students with a high probability of
success, and crafting an entering class that also meets the university’s
mission. Given the costs associated with a year of college, consciously
admitting students with low probabilities of success is not good public policy
and is a cruel act towards individuals. Admissions is necessarily, therefore,
both an attempt to predict success and a message to applicants about what
attributes are highly valued by the institution, i.e., merit.
The University has faced many challenges in
meeting its broadly defined diversity goals since the landmark decision Sweatt
v Painter.[vi]
The Hopwood decision is the most recent judicial chapter, but the
immediate and pressing challenge is managing enrollment growth while attaining
desired diversity—within the confines of the law. Each new chapter challenges
previous definitions of merit.
Even before 1997 and the Hopwood
decision, UT Austin had begun to refine it’s definition of merit, which when
applied to an admission decision, consisted of high standardized test scores
and high class rank. This approach, often called the “classic model,” was
common among colleges and universities and consistent with an era of high
stakes testing and accountability in all levels of education, especially in
Texas at the elementary and secondary school levels.[vii]
It is well documented that a simple distribution of students by standardized
test scores will certainly result in the depression of diversity, not only
racially and ethnically, but economically as well.[viii]
Shortly after Hopwood,
the Texas State Legislature exerted its own definition of merit. Through the
passage of HB 588, the “Texas Top 10% Automatic Admissions Law,” any
student graduating in the top 10% of his/her Texas high school class is
automatically admissible to any public college or university in the state.
Since 1997, automatically admitted students have accounted for approximately
one-half of all entering freshmen at UT Austin. Again. the challenge for the
University family was to fashion an admissions policy that resulted in a
diverse freshman class, while assuring a high probability of success for each
of the students admitted, and staying within the law.
The
Evolution of UT Austin’s Admissions Policy
Before 1997, The University of Texas at
Austin believed a meritorious applicant was one who scored high on either the
ACT Assessment or the SAT I: Reasoning Test and who had graduated near the top
of his/her high school class. At that time, students were sorted according to a
formula that predicted a freshman grade point average (GPA). Students with the
highest predicted GPAs were admitted first. The process was efficient as it
required almost no human intervention or judgment. The University (and almost
all other selective public institutions) became comfortable with a
computer-driven method of admitting students that had been in place for a
number of years.
Today,
the UT Austin admissions process is much more elaborate and the concept of
merit is much broader. With the entering class of 1997, for those not
automatically admitted, the idea of merit was expanded to include the following
factors:
- The Academic Index (AI)
High School Record:
- Class rank
- Completion of UT required high school curriculum
- Extent to which students exceed the UT required units
- SAT/ACT score
- The Personal Achievement Index (PAI)
- Scores on two essays
- Leadership
- Extracurricular Activities
- Awards/honors
- Work experience
- Service to school or community
- Special circumstances:
- Socio-economic status of family
- Single parent home
- Language spoken at home
- Family responsibilities
- Socio-economic status of school attended
- Average SAT/ACT of school attended in relation to student's own
SAT/ACT
Merit still includes high test scores and
high class rank, but it also includes the ambition to tackle rigorous high
school coursework, the production of quality prose, and the desire to make a
difference in one’s school, home, or community. Evidence of employability
(work), and some sense of having excelled in any number of areas are also
considered. Moreover, admissions officials place these attributes in the
context of the circumstances under which the student lived. Since 1997, the
rational, thoughtful, and reasoned judgments of people complemented prediction
formulas. Throughout the United States, many social scientists, educators, and
reformers, chief among them the University of California System President
Richard Atkinson, call this the “holistic approach” and advocate reducing
the emphasis on test scores.[x]
The University of Texas did precisely that in 1997 and since then has analyzed
the qualities each applicant would bring to an entering freshman class.
Furthermore, retention rates and performance have remained stable or increased
since the implementation of this expanded admissions routine.[xi]
The
Role of Standardized Tests in the College Admissions Process at UT Austin
There are only two nationally-validated,
standardized college admissions tests in the United States today: the ACT
Assessment and the SAT I: Reasoning Test.
The ACT Assessment is owned and administered
by ACT, Inc. (formerly called the American College Testing Program, Inc.). It
is widely known as an achievement test based on a curriculum commonly taught in
American high schools. It includes four tests: English, Mathematics, Reading,
and Science Reasoning. Students receive a scaled score in each area and an
overall Composite score. The scale ranges from 1-36 and the national average is
21.0.
The SAT I: Reasoning Test is owned by the
College Entrance Examination Board (College Board) and administered by the
Educational Testing Service (ETS). It is designed to be and is recognized as an
aptitude test not connected to any curriculum. It includes two tests: Verbal
and Quantitative. Students receive scaled scores on each that range from
200-800 in intervals of ten. Many schools combine the two scores to form the
more familiar 400-1600 score. The national average is a 1020 combined score.
A primary purpose of both instruments is to
add to the accuracy of predicted freshman grade point average. Neither ACT,
Inc. nor the College Board has ever suggested that its scores become the sole
criteria for any high stakes decision. On the contrary, their literature
actively discourages such an application.[xii]
Concerns over the fairness of the ACT/SAT
would be much more acute if students were admitted as a result of a formula
based on scores alone. No undergraduate is admitted to UT Austin that
way. Indeed, even in those cases where the ACT/SAT is considered, it is merely
part of a comprehensive approach:
- About one-half of entering
freshmen are automatically admitted as "Top 10%" students. For those
students, test scores play no role in the admission decision.
- For
all others, a decision is based on an academic and/or personal achievement
index. (See above.)
-
Test scores are not considered
in the computation of the PAI; and
- In the AI, where test scores are
used and a formula is developed, high school class rank and course selection
are considered as well.
Standardized tests play an important, but
secondary role in the admissions process.
Validating
the Use of Standardized Admissions Test Scores at UT Austin
The development of the formulas used to
predict freshman GPAs includes the computation of the relationship between test
scores and actual earned GPAs. (UT Austin uses three explanatory variables in
its formulas: the high school percentile, which is derived from the school
reported class rank and size; the ACT English or SAT Verbal, and the ACT Math
or the SAT Quantitative, whichever was submitted by the student.[xiii])
In its Guide to the College Board Validity Study Service, the Board
describes three types of information every validity study should have. The
first is the correlation between the predictors and the criteria; the second is
the prediction equation, which is used to predict an individual’s freshman
GPA; and the third is the “error band” or the standard error of estimate.[xiv]
The
Correlation Between Test Scores and GPA
Research conducted by UT’s Office of
Admissions and the Measurement and Evaluation Center, and later independently
validated by ACT, Inc., has established that there is a moderate to strong
relationship between test scores and freshman GPAs (r=.37-.41).[xv]
High School Percentile Rank showed a slightly stronger relationship (r=.45).
The UT Austin experience is typical of virtually all other universities
conducting validity studies: no single predictor by itself is strong enough to
adequately predict freshman GPAs. Because of this limitation the best approach
is to combine variables into a prediction, i.e., multiple regression, equation.[xvi]
The
Prediction Equation
UT Austin has ten undergraduate colleges.
For purposes of applying prediction formulas, Liberal Arts, Communications,
Fine Arts, Social Work, and Education share the same equations because of
similarities in course requirements. For the same reason, Nursing, Natural
Sciences, and Architecture share another, and Business and Engineering are
large and unique enough for each to have its own. The correlations between the
prediction models and freshman GPAs are strong, ranging from .47 to .57, and
are typical of other universities.[xvii]
The
Standard Error of Estimate
The range of the standard error of estimate
in UT Austin’s prediction equations is from 0.55 to 0.72 of a grade point.
The national median standard error of estimate for schools using the ACT
Assessment, for example, is approximately 0.75.[xviii]
This is strong evidence that UT Austin formulas, as currently configured, are
serving the admissions goal of accurately predicting freshman GPA.
The ultimate validation, however, is that
performance (actual freshman GPA) and persistence (the percentage returning for
their sophomore year) for every racial/ethnic and gender group has held steady
or improved since 1996. Since the implementation of the University’s present
admissions routine, one-year retention rates have increased each year—from
87.9% in 1996 to 92.0% in 2000.[xix]
Fairness:
The Relationship Between Class Rank, Test Scores, Grade Point Average, and
Gender and Racial/Ethnic Groups and Access
The legitimate concern for fairness pervades
all aspects of testing, especially including the development of the tests,
access to the tests, the standardization of the conditions under which the test
is administered, and the use of the test scores.
Both ACT, Inc. and the College Board have
elaborate fairness reviews to screen out items determined to have geographic,
gender, culture, or racial bias.[xx]
Each test takes a minimum of two years to develop. The process includes
intensive screening, editing, reviewing and field-testing. Both firms utilize a
method called Differential Item Functioning (dif) to determine if a question
“behaves” differently among diverse groups with the same level of expertise
with respect to what is being tested.[xxi]
In order to validate its entire admissions
routine, UT’s Office of Admissions and the Measurement and Evaluation Center
analyzed the relationships between the elements of its prediction formulas
(high school class rank and test scores) and freshmen GPAs. (See Table 1
below.) When broken down by gender and racial/ethnic groups, the relationships
ranged from positive correlations of .21 to .47. Only the relationship of ACT
Math to African American GPA (.21) was found to be less than moderate and then
only slightly so. Consistent with other research, class rank was found to have
the strongest relationship to GPA, except for Hispanics and females.
By comparison, an ACT analysis of the
elements of UT Austin’s PAI, which consists of the “Leadership Score” (an
evaluation by an admissions officer of the student’s resume), and the mean
score of the two essays students submit, shows a weaker relationship than test
scores. (Leadership Score: r=.22 and Essays: r=.26)[xxii]
The UT Austin experience is a textbook
example of how no predictor by itself, whether objective or subjective
or standardized or performance-based, has sufficient power to predict freshman
GPA accurately. The best possible approach for all students is to assimilate as
many predictors as possible into the admissions process.
Table 1
The University of Texas at
Austin
Correlations of Freshman
Year GPA with Test Scores, and Rank
Summer/Fall 1999 Entering
Freshmen
|
|
ACT Assessment
|
SAT I: Reasoning Test
|
High School Rank
|
|
|
English
|
Mathematics
|
Verbal |
Quantitative |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Male |
.33
|
.38
|
.31
|
.39
|
.43
|
| Female |
.35
|
.44
|
.38
|
.42
|
.38
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| White |
.35
|
.37
|
.31
|
.33
|
.44
|
| African American |
.28
|
.21
|
.26
|
.30
|
.47
|
| Asian American |
.35
|
.43
|
.33
|
.40
|
.47
|
| Hispanic |
.31
|
.33
|
.28
|
.30
|
.29
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| All Students |
.35 |
.38 |
.32 |
.36 |
.42 |
Another issue of concern to the Task Force
was the possible effects of “coaching” or test preparation. If the SAT or
the ACT is sensitive to short term test preparation, like what is available
from expensive test preparation firms, then test takers from poor homes, i.e.,
those not able to afford prep classes, are at an unacceptable disadvantage.
While there is a dearth of independent and
credible research in this area, what is currently available strongly suggests
that the effect of coaching on the SAT I and the ACT Assessment is minimal and
within the standard error of measurements of the tests.[xxiii]
Additionally, since the reliability of both tests is high (about .92 for the
SAT I and .96 for the ACT), there is no credible evidence that retesting has
consistently significant benefits for students.[xxiv]
Neither coaching nor retesting has as much
effect on raising scores as does decisions by students to prepare themselves
for college by taking the most challenging coursework available to them.[xxv]
Because of this sensitivity to course-taking patterns, and variations in the
quality of what is available to high school students, score differences will
result if there is inequity in the availability of quality teaching and
rigorous coursework among UT Austin’s feeder schools.
A final fairness issue concerns access to
the tests and whether registration fees unfairly exclude students, who cannot
afford to pay, from taking the tests. Both ACT, Inc. and the College Board make
available fee waivers for economically disadvantaged students during their
junior and/or senior year of high school.[xxvi]
The
SAT II: Subject Tests
The SAT II: Subject Tests were once called
the “Achievement Tests.”During
his address to the American Council on Education, Dr. Atkinson stated, “The
SAT II begins to approximate what I judge to be an appropriate test for the
University’s admissions process. It tests students on specific subjects that
are well defined and readily described.”
He continues by asserting, “We have found that the SAT II is a better
predictor of first-year college performance.”[xxvii]
UT Austin requires SAT II scores in math and
separately in writing for nearly all of its entering freshmen for purposes of
course placement. Interest in the use of SAT IIs for admissions is a relatively
new phenomenon. The College Board designed the SAT I: Reasoning Test for
admissions and SAT II: Subject Tests for course placement. Throughout its
history the ACT Assessment has been used routinely for both throughout the
nation.[xxviii]
The central question before this Task Force,
however, is whether the SAT II, when combined with high school class rank, does
a significantly better job of predicting freshman GPA.
- Among students who took SAT I
and II, the correlation between SAT Verbal and Math and freshman GPA is strong
(.44); for SAT II Math and Writing it is strong (.48);
- Among
students who took the ACT and SAT II, the correlation between the ACT Tests and
freshman GPA is strong (.47); for the SAT II Math and Writing, the correlation
is strong (.48).
- In
both of the cases above, the addition of the SAT II leads to insignificant
increases in predictive powers. (From .47 to .49 for ACT and from .44 to .48
for SAT I.)
- Among
students taking the ACT, SAT I and SAT II the correlations (without including
class rank) with freshman GPA are .37, .37, and .38 respectively.
At UT Austin, such small differences in
predictive validity between the SAT I and SAT II, and even smaller differences
between SAT II and the ACT, are insufficient for this Task Force to recommend
the use of the SAT II in the area of admissions. Further, for purposes of
admissions, there is no evidence of any meaningful difference between
achievement and aptitude testing; the correlation between the ACT Composite and
the SAT I Combined Score is .92 nationally and .87 at UT Austin.[xxix]
Conclusions
and Supporting Evidence The Task Force proceeds from the
premise that more information on applicants is better than less. The use of the
ACT Assessment and the SAT I: Reasoning Test increases the confidence,
reliability and accuracy of attempts to predict freshman GPA. Discontinuing
their use would reduce information with which admissions decisions are made.
Further,
the Task Force affirms that standardized college admissions test scores provide
admissions decision-makers and faculty with information that is not available
from any other source:
- standard measures across
geographical borders;
- standard measures over time;
- nationally-validated rigorous
instruments measuring higher-order thinking and problem-solving;
- instruments with established
reliability; and
- results obtained under secure
conditions using many equated forms.
The
predictive power of the ACT Assessment and the SAT I has been validated through
research conducted on campus by the UT Austin Office of Admissions Research and
the Measurement and Evaluation Center, and externally by ACT, Inc. and the
College Board/Educational Testing Service.[xxx]
These validity studies are on-going.
Reforms
most often associated with attempts to provide greater access to traditionally
underrepresented students (moderating standardized test scores by considering
them in the context of overall academic performance in high school and
evaluating applicants in the context of their personal experiences—the
holistic approach) were instituted at the University of Texas at Austin with
the entering freshman class of 1997. This Task Force affirms our current
admissions process as one that considers the student in relation to his/her
life experiences.
Since
the implementation of the Texas Top 10% Law and a refined and expanded
definition of merit, UT Austin has enrolled freshman classes about as diverse
as classes enrolled before 1997 when affirmative action was used.
Success,
in terms of retention, for the entering freshman classes enrolled at UT Austin
since 1996, has improved annually while performance levels have remained
stable.
Like
many other universities, UT Austin had found the classic model of admissions
(distributing students according to a formula based on test scores and class
rank alone) to be easy and efficient. Since 1997, however, the University has
individually reviewed all applications of students not automatically admitted.
The
developers of the ACT and the SAT agree that test scores should not be used as
a sole criteria for making high stakes decisions but that scores should be used
in conjunction with as many other variables as possible. This Task Force
affirms that UT Austin does this through the use of the Personal Achievement
Index (PAI).
The
Task Force has established that test scores have played no role in the
admission of approximately one half of UT’s entering freshmen classes since
1997.
Test
scores play a limited role in the admissions process: they make up about one
half of the prediction formulas that make up one half of the matrix used to
admit about one half of entering freshmen.
There
is a moderate to strong relationship between test scores and freshmen GPAs, but
the best method of prediction is to combine test scores with high school class
rank. At UT Austin the resulting prediction equations have a strong
relationship to freshman GPA.
Correlations
between the elements of UT’s prediction formulas (test scores and class rank)
show a moderate to strong predictive relationship with freshman GPA for all
gender and racial ethnic/groups.
The
use of differential item functioning (dif), and other procedures safeguarding
against racial/ethnic, gender, cultural and geographic bias in the development
of the ACT and SAT I, are adequate to assure fairness for students taking the
tests.
ACT,
Inc. and The College Board provide adequate access to its tests for all
students through the distribution of free tests for preparation purposes and
the use of waivers for students who cannot afford to pay test fees.
There
is no replacement for the reasoned judgment of professionals in the admissions
process. While the elements of the Personal Achievement Index (Leadership Score
and Essays) have a moderate relationship to freshman GPA, their use contributes
to the educational mission of the University.
The
predictive power of the SAT II: Subject Tests is comparable to that of the ACT
Assessment or the SAT I. Combining the SAT II with either the ACT or the SAT I
adds little to the strength of prediction formulas currently in use.
Recommendations
to the President
- The Task Force recommends that
the University continue the use of the ACT Assessment and the SAT I: Reasoning
Test, subject to ongoing validation for that purpose, in the admissions process
and that the University show no preference for either.
- The
Task Force recommends the continued use of professional reviews of
applications, resulting in a Personal Achievement Index score, subject to
ongoing validation for that purpose, for students not automatically admitted to
UT Austin.
- The
Task Force does not recommend the use of the SAT II: Subject Tests for
admissions purposes, but does recommend the continued use of SAT IIs for course
placement, subject to ongoing validation for that purpose.
##################################################
ENDNOTES
[i]
See
Hopwood v State of Texas, 78 F.3d
932 (5th Cir.). In March 1996, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Fifth Circuit ruled on the appeal of the initial Hopwood decision:
”In summary, we hold that the University of Texas School of Law may not
use race as a factor in deciding which applicants to admit in order to
achieve a diverse student body, to combat the perceived effects of a hostile
environment at the law school, to alleviate the law school’s poor
reputation in the minority community, or to eliminate any present effects of
past discrimination by actors other than the law school.”
[ii]
See Richard C. Atkinson, Standardized Tests and Access to American
Universities, The 2001 Robert H. Atwell Distinguished Lecture, delivered
at the 83rd Annual Meeting of the American Council on Education,
Washington, DC, February 18, 2001, p 2.
[iii]
The quotes are taken from Dr. Faulkner’s letter of appointment to each of
the Task Force members. It is dated July 3, 2001.
[iv]
Institution Strategic Enrollment Management Plan, The University of Texas
at Austin, October 1, 2001, p. 2.
[v]
Since the U.S Supreme Court ruling in Regents
of the University of California v Bakke (438 US 265, 1978), which allows
for affirmative action as part of an educational mission, the educational
value of diversity has been well-established. The Harvard Civil Rights
Project, in its publication Diversity Challenged, has six studies and
cites many more in this area. In his introduction, Professor Gary Orfield
states that the studies explore what is known about how increasing minority
enrollment enriches the educational process. Diversity of students produces
a broader educational experience, both in traditional learning and in
preparing for jobs, professions, and effective citizenship in a multiracial
democracy.
[vi]
In
1946, Heman Marion Sweatt applied for admission to The University of Texas
School of Law, but his application was rejected because he was an African
American and UT Austin was a segregated institution. Sweatt, with
NAACP counsel, sued. Sweatt lost in state court, but in 1950, in an
appeal argued by Thurgood Marshall, the United States Supreme Court ordered
the integration of The University of Texas’ School of Law and Graduate
School. (See SWEATT
v. PAINTER, 339 U.S. 629 (1950))
[vii]
For a more in depth discussion of the Classic Model of Admissions see Bruce
Walker and Gary Lavergne, “Affirmative Action and Percentage Plans”,
College Board Review, May 2001 no. 193, p. 18-23.
[viii]
Throughout their histories, both the SAT and the ACT have recorded gaps in
mean scores among different racial/ethnic groups and by household incomes.
The annual report for the SAT is called the College-Bound Senior Report
and the ACT is called the ACT Profile. These reports are issued
nationally and by state.
[ix]
For non-top 10% students the required units are:
Language Arts
4 units
of English, one of which may be writing, world literature, speech, or
journalism. English as a second language (ESL) and correlated language arts
do not count as units of English.
Foreign Language
2 units
(3 recommended) of a single foreign language.
Mathematics
3 units
(4 recommended) at the level of Algebra I or higher: algebra, plane
geometry, trigonometry, analytic geometry, elementary analysis, probability
& statistics, solid geometry, calculus with analytic geometry, or number
theory. Fundamentals of mathematics, mathematics of money, and informal
geometry do not count as units of mathematics.
Science
2 units
(3 recommended) of laboratory science. Recommended courses include biology,
chemistry, physical science, and physics.
Social Studies
3
units, which may include anthropology, area studies, ethnic studies,
economics, geography, government (civics), philosophy, psychology, problems
in social science, sociology, Texas history (advanced), U.S. history, or
world history.
Fine Arts
One-half
unit of art, dance, music, or theatre arts is strongly recommended.
The
units listed above are the minimum requirements for admission consideration
at UT-Austin. The pool of prospective freshmen is so competitive that
students who take additional units, especially in math and science, will
strengthen their chances for both admission and later success in a rigorous
college curriculum.
Admission
is granted to applicants who have not completed the required units listed
above if they are Texas residents qualified for admission on the basis of
graduation in the top 10% of their high school class. Recipients of
bona fide scholarships designated by the University president and students
whose high school does not offer the courses necessary to complete the unit
requirements may apply to the Director of Admissions for an exception.
Students who are admitted by exception must remove deficiencies to graduate;
courses taken to remove a deficiency do not count toward the student's
degree.
[x]
Dr. Atkinson called for less emphasis on standardized tests and more
“holistic procedures” with “processes that look at the full
range of [student] accomplishments within the context of the opportunities
they enjoyed and the obstacles they faced.”
See Atkinson, Standardized Tests and Access to American
Universities, pgs. 7-8.
[xii]
See Guidelines on the Uses of College Board Test Scores and Related Data,
undated, The College Board, p. 8, 11; Policy and Guidelines for Uses of Data from
ACT-Administered Assessments," ACT, Inc. 1998, p. 11.
[xiii]
The high school percentile is computed by one (1) minus the division of the
class rank by the class size, and then multiplied by 100. Students
submitting more than one set of test scores are given the benefit of the
highest possible predicted GPA.
[xiv]
Guide to the College Board Validity Study Service, The College Board,
1988, p. 5-8.
[xv]
The population studied was the summer/fall 1999 entering freshman class.
In determining the extent to which correlations are significant, the
Educational Testing Service, in their Admitted Class Evaluation Service,
recommends the following guidelines:Strong
=>.39; Moderate = .39-.25; Weak = <.25. In their reports, ETS has
shown that raw correlations can be shown to be stronger when adjusted for a
restriction of range of scores. The correlation is even higher when course
difficulty is factored in as well. All correlations cited in this report are
unadjusted.
[xvi]
See Using the ACT in Making Admission and Course Placement Decisions at
the University of Texas at Austin, ACT. Inc., n.p.; and Gary M. Lavergne
and Bruce Walker, Revising Multiple Regression Equations for Calculating
Predicted Freshman Year Grade Point Average at the University of Texas at
Austin, Office of Admissions Research, UT Austin, August 14, 2001, p. 9.
Without identifying the institutions, ACT presented the Task Force
with predictive validity data from eight Big 12 and Big 10 institutions.
Their analysis showed correlations between ACT and FGPA ranged from .35
to.41.
[xvii]
The range among the Big 10 and Big 12 institutions described above was
.43-.52.
[xviii]
See ACT Predictive Research Services, Prediction Research Summary Tables,
National Report, 1997-98, p. 33-36.
[xx]
For a complete description of the fairness review processes see How the
SAT Is Made, The College Board, 2001, and Fairness Report for the ACT
Assessment Tests, ACT, Inc., 2000.
[xxi]
See The Use of the Differential Item Functioning (DIF) Index in ETS Test
Development .
[xxii]
Using the ACT in Making Admission and Course Placement Decisions at the
University of Texas at Austin, ACT. Inc., Table 1, n.p; The scale of the
essays and the Leadership Score is only six points, which could explain the
moderate relationships.
[xxiii]
See Donald E. Powers and Donald A. Rock, Effects of Coaching on SAT I:
Reasoning Scores, College Board Report No. 98-6, and Act Assessment
Technical Manual, pgs. 48-49. Powers found that the difference between
coached and uncoached students taking the SAT was only +8 on verbal and +18
on the quantitative sections, for a total of +26. The standard error of
measurement for each of the sections is approximately +/-30. The effect of
test preparation for the ACT Assessment is from -0.6 to +0.2. The standard
error of measurement of the ACT is +/-0.92. See Roberta Scholes, Test
Preparation Activities Among ACT-Tested Students and Their Effects on ACT
Assessment Scores, paper presented to the American Educational Research
Association, Chicago, 1997, and Kevin M. Andrews and Robert L. Ziomek, Score
Gains on Retesting with the ACT Assessment
[xxv]
In their annual reports, both ACT and the College Board produce large
amounts of data demonstrating score differences based on high school course
taking. See ACT’s High School Profile Report and
the College Board’s College Bound Senior Report.
[xxvi]
For all practical purposes, students receiving any type of public
assistance, like free or reduced lunch, are eligible for a fee waiver. ACT
grants one during the junior or senior year; the College Board grants two.
[xxvii]
Atkinson, Standardized Tests and Access to American Universities,
pgs. 7-8.
[xxviii]
Examples include University of Iowa, University of Minnesota, Ohio State
University, University of Missouri, Iowa State University. Schools allowing
for the submission of the ACT in lieu of both the SAT I and II include Yale
University, University of Pennsylvania, Colgate University, Brown
University, Johns Hopkins, William and Mary, Case Western Reserve,
Wellesley, Catholic U, Boston College, Brandeis, and Tufts (NACAC Journal,
1998)
[xxx]
Sarah A. Hezlett, et. Al., The Effectiveness of the SAT in Predicting
Success Early and Late in College: A Meta Analysis, Paper presented at
the 2001 AERA/NCME Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington.
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