首页
登录
职称英语
The Fairness of College Entrance ExamsI. SAT and ACT: major tests to measure ap
The Fairness of College Entrance ExamsI. SAT and ACT: major tests to measure ap
游客
2023-10-28
22
管理
问题
The Fairness of College Entrance Exams
I. SAT and ACT: major tests to measure applicants’ 【T1】______
II. Tendency to drop admission requirements
-More than 【T2】______ universities require no SAT or ACT test score
-More and more universities become test-optional
-Others: care more about an applicant’s life experience, 【T3】______, community services and talents.
III. GPA: another way to judge applicants’ 【T4】______
International applicants: convert to GPA 【T5】______
It is a better 【T6】______ of academic strength
IV. Views about the fairness of SAT
-Cheryl O’Brien believes:
a) 【T7】______ students have a advantage on tests
b) Self study: no 【T8】______
-A 2010 study: SAT was 【T9】______ certain minority group
-Ryan Lessing, a student at Brown University:
It is a benchmark 【T10】______ among applicants, not the cause of educational inequality [br] 【T9】
The Fairness of College Entrance Exams
I’m Anne Ball. Today we will talk about the fairness of college entrance exams. The SAT and ACT are the two major college entrance tests in the United States. [1]
For years, colleges have used these tests to help measure an applicant’s academic skills.
But a growing number of American universities are dropping the entrance exam requirement. [2]
More than 800 universities now allow students to apply without an SAT or ACT test score.
More universities are becoming "test optional." Students who apply to test-optional schools can choose whether they want to include test scores in their applications. Each of America’s more than 3,000 colleges and universities has its own admission requirements. At some colleges, test scores are very important. [3]
Others are more interested in an applicant’s life experience, teacher recommendations, community services, and talents.
[4]
High school GPA, or grade point average, is another way to judge a student’s ability.
A GPA of 3.5 or higher (on scale from 0 to 4) is considered good. [5]
For international applicants, universities have specialists review the academic standards of different countries and convert them to GPA equivalents.
Jennifer Tkacz is the Director of International Admissions at George Mason University. It is the largest test-optional university in the United States. She explains why the school went test-optional in 2006. [6]
"The university administration felt that for many students, their test scores aren’t necessarily a reflection of their academic strength and the GPA is a much better indicator."
Ms. Tkacz says high school performance says more about a student’s potential than a test score.
Cheryl O’Brien owns a test preparation company in New York. [7]
She says wealthy students have a major advantage on college entrance tests.
They can spend months or even years preparing for the test with private teachers. But self-study, even for highly motivated students, is not the same. [8]
Ms. O’Brien explains: "It’s never going to be as good as working with somebody when you can have feedback.
Books don’t talk back to you. Books don’t explain to you what’s going on and how to understand something." A 2010 study in the Harvard Educational Review argued that the SAT used vocabulary that was more familiar to white test takers. [9]
The study said that the SAT "appears to be biased against the African-American minority group."
Ryan Lessing is a student at Brown University, a highly selective school that requires a test score. He says the SAT is not perfect, but it serves an important purpose. "What the SATs provide is a relatively neutral benchmark... The rigor of coursework is not the same across schools. The activities available are not the same across schools... [10]
The SAT provides some benchmark, which is at least relatively consistent among applicants."
Mr. Lessing says the SAT is not the cause of educational inequality. He says the difference in test scores just reflects the deep inequality in American society.
选项
答案
biased against
解析
录音提到《哈佛教育评论》2010年一项研究认为SAT考试对非洲裔美国人似乎存有偏见(appears to be biased against...),故填入biased against。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/3136039.html
相关试题推荐
TheChinesegovernmenttakesthefollowingmeasurestoensurethefoodsecurity
TheChinesegovernmenttakesthefollowingmeasurestoensurethefoodsecurity
TheChinesegovernmenttakesthefollowingmeasurestoensurethefoodsecurity
[originaltext]W:Bob,IwanttoapplytocollegeintheUnitedStates.Couldyo
[originaltext]W:Bob,IwanttoapplytocollegeintheUnitedStates.Couldyo
Today,moreandmoreparentsaresendingtheirchildrentocollegesanduniversi
DearKind-Trustee-Who-Sends-Orphans-to-College,HereIam!Itravelledy
AccordingtotheAmericanCollegeHealthAssociation’smostrecentannualna
PASSAGETWOCollegesupgradetheirimagebychangingtheirnames.本文主要讨论了美国一些学院为了提
ThreeyearsagoElonCollege,aschoolofmorethan4,000studentswithar
随机试题
Thegovernmentistobanpaymentstowitnessesbynewspapersseekingtobuy
[originaltext]W:Lookatthatbigfieldofcorn.Andthere’safarmwithsomeb
Throughouthistorymanhashadtoacceptthefactthatalllivingthingsmus
唐朝工匠善用各种矿物烧制出()三种艳丽的彩色陶器,叫“唐三彩”。唐三彩作品多为
A.龈炎 B.过敏性痛 C.咬合痛 D.自发性痛 E.修复体松动牙体缺损
李先生今年35岁,是某大学一名教师,他计划65岁时退休。为了在退休后仍然能够保持
在保证合同没有约定的情况下,保证期间。债权人依法将主债权转让给第三人的,保证人不
C第一步,观察特征。题干图形均由4个小图形组成,因此优先考虑数元素。第二步,一条式,从左到右找规律。题干每个图形均有4种不同的元素,因此问号处也应该有4种不同的
人在每一瞬间,将心理活动选择了某些对象而忽略了另一些对象。这一特点指的是注意的(
证券投资的风险性越高,意味着遭受损失的可能性越大,其收益率会越低。()
最新回复
(
0
)