SAT exam & exam prep overview: Difference between revisions
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== SAT Exam overview == | == SAT Exam overview == | ||
* SAT = "Scholastic Assessment Test" | |||
* owned by the College Board (CB) | |||
** we will use "CB" here, although the College Board does not refer to itself by the abbreviation) | |||
* SAT tests are developed and administered by Educational Testing Service (ETS) | |||
** SAT accounts for 25% of ETS functions | |||
** ETS creates also develops and administers TOEFL ("Test of English as a Foreign Language"), GRE (graduate school admissions), and Praxis (for teachers) | |||
* note that CB and ETS are non-profits but both engage in aggressive business practices | |||
=== Background === | |||
* started in 1926 | |||
* the purpose of the SAT was to create a merit-based college admissions metric independent of student grades, school, and demographic | |||
* originally called "SAT I: Reasoning Test" (SAT I dropped in 2004, "reasoning test" dropped in 2016) | |||
* the SAT II was originally "SAT II: Subject Tests" | |||
* the official of the SAT test changed from "Scholastic Aptitude Test" to SAT, and the CB claimed those letters were no longer abbreviations for anything | |||
* | |||
=== 2016 changes === | |||
* in 2014, College Board announced fundamental changes in the SAT test | |||
** CB claimed it was because the test had "become disconnected from the work of our high schools.” | |||
** it was also in response rising popularity of the ACT test CB changed core test format | |||
*** ACT = "American College Testing" (title since dropped, refers to itself solely as "ACT") | |||
*** in 2012, more students took the ACT than the SAT for the first time (see [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACT_(test)ACT test (wiki)]] | |||
*** the SAT test was changed to follow a similar format as the ACT | |||
**** source [https://web.archive.org/web/20140514233331/http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/06/education/major-changes-in-sat-announced-by-college-board.html?_r=1 A New SAT Aims to Realign With Schoolwork(NY Times)]] | |||
* starting 2016, the SAT changes included: | |||
** total score returned to 1600 | |||
** 4 instead of 5 possible answers | |||
** dropped the 1/4-point penalty for wrong answers | |||
*** the penalty was designed to encourage skipping and penalize random guessing | |||
** math narrowed to focus on linear equations, equations or functions, rations, percentages and proportional reasoning | |||
** "critical reading" section changed to "evidence-based" (passage-based) reading excerpts (like the ACT) | |||
** grammar section changed to "evidence-based" (passage-based) reading excerpts (like the ACT) | |||
** verbal section vocabulary changed to evidence-based selection and use of more common words | |||
** essay now optional (thus the total score of 1600 instead of the previous 2400) | |||
** CB partnered with Khan Academy in order to offer free preparation instruction and practice | |||
=== Essay section & Subject tests dropped 2021 === | |||
* the College Board dropped the essay (after the June, 2021 test, although it will be offered in some states as per state rules | |||
* also dropped Subject Tests | |||
** the official reason for these changes was because of changes in college admissions requirements due to the COVID crisis | |||
** anecdotally, we can assume it was due to severe drop in revenue as result of the crisis | |||
=== Preparation & Practice Options === | |||
* the College Board published the "Official SAT Practice Book" | |||
** 2018 edition | |||
*** includes Practice tests 1-8 | |||
** 2021 edition | |||
*** includes Practice tests 1, 3, 4-10 | |||
* Princeton Review | |||
** started in 1981, now owned by ST Unitas, a Korean Ed-tech company | |||
== SAT Exam Practice == | == SAT Exam Practice == |
Revision as of 14:30, 15 April 2021
SAT Exam Prep
SAT Exam overview[edit | edit source]
- SAT = "Scholastic Assessment Test"
- owned by the College Board (CB)
- we will use "CB" here, although the College Board does not refer to itself by the abbreviation)
- SAT tests are developed and administered by Educational Testing Service (ETS)
- SAT accounts for 25% of ETS functions
- ETS creates also develops and administers TOEFL ("Test of English as a Foreign Language"), GRE (graduate school admissions), and Praxis (for teachers)
- note that CB and ETS are non-profits but both engage in aggressive business practices
Background[edit | edit source]
- started in 1926
- the purpose of the SAT was to create a merit-based college admissions metric independent of student grades, school, and demographic
- originally called "SAT I: Reasoning Test" (SAT I dropped in 2004, "reasoning test" dropped in 2016)
- the SAT II was originally "SAT II: Subject Tests"
- the official of the SAT test changed from "Scholastic Aptitude Test" to SAT, and the CB claimed those letters were no longer abbreviations for anything
2016 changes[edit | edit source]
- in 2014, College Board announced fundamental changes in the SAT test
- CB claimed it was because the test had "become disconnected from the work of our high schools.”
- it was also in response rising popularity of the ACT test CB changed core test format
- ACT = "American College Testing" (title since dropped, refers to itself solely as "ACT")
- in 2012, more students took the ACT than the SAT for the first time (see [test (wiki)]
- the SAT test was changed to follow a similar format as the ACT
- starting 2016, the SAT changes included:
- total score returned to 1600
- 4 instead of 5 possible answers
- dropped the 1/4-point penalty for wrong answers
- the penalty was designed to encourage skipping and penalize random guessing
- math narrowed to focus on linear equations, equations or functions, rations, percentages and proportional reasoning
- "critical reading" section changed to "evidence-based" (passage-based) reading excerpts (like the ACT)
- grammar section changed to "evidence-based" (passage-based) reading excerpts (like the ACT)
- verbal section vocabulary changed to evidence-based selection and use of more common words
- essay now optional (thus the total score of 1600 instead of the previous 2400)
- CB partnered with Khan Academy in order to offer free preparation instruction and practice
Essay section & Subject tests dropped 2021[edit | edit source]
- the College Board dropped the essay (after the June, 2021 test, although it will be offered in some states as per state rules
- also dropped Subject Tests
- the official reason for these changes was because of changes in college admissions requirements due to the COVID crisis
- anecdotally, we can assume it was due to severe drop in revenue as result of the crisis
Preparation & Practice Options[edit | edit source]
- the College Board published the "Official SAT Practice Book"
- 2018 edition
- includes Practice tests 1-8
- 2021 edition
- includes Practice tests 1, 3, 4-10
- 2018 edition
- Princeton Review
- started in 1981, now owned by ST Unitas, a Korean Ed-tech company
SAT Exam Practice[edit | edit source]
- "practice" = replication of performance or game-day sitution
- therefore, "SAT practice" is NOT online
- online "practice" is "enrichment" not "practice"
SAT Enrichment[edit | edit source]
- enrichment means enhancement, getting better
- there are many enrichment sites and manuals
- treat them as enrichment and not practice
- daily problems, vocabulary, etc. is excellent enrichment
- but it is not practice
- above all, ON-LINE "practice" is not practice
- the test is not on-line: it is sit-down, on-paper
- therefore, SAT prep that is not sit-down, online, with official practice or released actual tests, using pencil, clock, and bubble sheet IS NOT PRACTICE
SAT Practice[edit | edit source]
- practice is mimicking test-day situation
- research shows that replication via practice of actual exam situation yields higher actual exam results
- SAT practice looks like:
- desk and chair
- Official SAT practice test in booklet form
- not one-sided sheets, not online: booklet
- using pencil and bubble sheet
- analog clock (could be a computer app)
- no distractions
- full-length practice tests
- can be divided by section, but not less than a section
Benefits of SAT Practice[edit | edit source]
- familiarity with the types of passages and questions
- developing elimination strategies
- de-coding the way the test-makers build correct and, more importantly, incorrect answers
- tome awareness
- review of responses and understanding why answers are right or wrong
- identify Easy-Medium-Hard questions and passages
- increasing accuracy and efficiency with each practice exam
- bubble sheets use and strategies
- maintaining focus across full-length practice
- building resistance to length and getting past boring
- getting used to test-day situation
- sitting upright & no distractions
- use of juice, fruit-bar, or other natural source of glucose (natural sugar) for refreshment between sections as you would on test day
- practicing breathing, stretching, fidgeting and other refocusing strategies
SAT Verbal[edit | edit source]
SAT Reading[edit | edit source]
- SAT Reading Section Test Directions:
- Students are to answer questions based upon:
- what is stated" in the text or graphs (explicit meanings, textual and direct comprehension)
- what is "implied" in the text or graphs (implicit meanings, inference, deduction, identification of author purpose and techniques)
- Students are to answer questions based upon:
- SAT Reading Test Structure
- Students have 65 minutes to answer 52 questions
- Reading test has five readings with 10 or 11 questions each
- = average 13:00 min per reading passage
- note: two readings contain 11 questions so may take longer
Go to SAT Reading for more
SAT Writing[edit | edit source]
- SAT Writing Section Test Directions
- students are to answer questions based upon:
- revising text for effective expression of ideas
- correcting grammatical errors, such as sentence structure, usage, or punctuation
- interpret graphs and apply to text corrections
- some questions will refer to an underlined portion of a passage
- some questions will ask you to consider a portion of a passage or the passage as a whole
- the correct answer “most effectively improves the quality of writing”
- correct answers conform to “conventions of standard English”
- students are to answer questions based upon:
- SAT Writing Test Structure
- students have 35 min. to answer 44 questions
- test has four readings passages with 11 questions each
- = average of 8:45 min per passage
Go to SAT Writing for more
SAT Essay[edit | edit source]
- SAT Essay section cancelled as of June 2021
- along with SAT subject tests
- SAT Essay provides valuable practice and skills for rhetorical analysis