69传媒

Assessment

69传媒鈥 Scores Inch Up on ACT Exam

By Catherine Gewertz 鈥 September 07, 2017 4 min read
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69传媒 performed slightly better on the ACT this year than they did last year, and Hispanic students notched a special victory: Their level of college-readiness rose even as more of them took the exam.

The , up from 20.8 in the class of 2016, but the same as the classes of 2014 and 2015. Each of the four sections of the ACT鈥擡nglish, reading, math, and science鈥攊s scored on a 0-36 scale.

Fewer students took the ACT this year: 2.03 million, or 60 percent of the 2017 graduating class, sat for the test. Last year, about 60,000 more students鈥64 percent of the 2016 graduating class鈥攖ook the exam. The numbers mark the first decline in 13 years and the biggest drop in ACT test-taking since 1990.

The decline happened largely because Illinois and Michigan, two big states that require students to take a statewide college-entrance test, . In its market-share battle with the ACT, the College Board has been pushing hard to win more statewide contracts, which offer鈥攐r require鈥攖he SAT for all students during the school day.

The smaller size of the 2017 ACT testing pool probably accounted for the slight increase in performance, according to Paul J. Weeks, the ACT Inc.鈥檚 senior vice president for client relations.

Test scores tend to dip when more students join the group, because that usually brings a wider variety of skill and preparation levels. But the opposite happened this year with Hispanic students, which makes their performance notable.

The share of Hispanic students in the testing group rose to 17 percent in the class of 2017, up 1 percentage point from last year and 3 points since 2013. But their college-readiness rate rose, too: 24 percent met three or more of the ACT鈥檚 college-readiness benchmarks in 2017, compared with 23 percent in the class of 2016. The benchmarks are minimum ACT scores that correlate with a good chance of earning B鈥檚 or C鈥檚 in entry-level, credit-bearing college courses.

Hispanic students鈥 performance is still lagging nationally: 39 percent of students overall met three or more of the benchmarks. Six in 10 Asian-American students and half of white students met those benchmarks. But Weeks said the fact that Hispanic students鈥 scores are rising while more of them take the test is 鈥渃ause for optimism.鈥

Black 69传媒鈥 Growth

African-American students鈥 performance improved slightly, with 12 percent meeting three or more college-readiness benchmarks, compared with 11 percent in the class of 2016 and 10 percent in 2013. Thirteen percent of the students who took the ACT were African-American, a level that鈥檚 held steady since 2013.

鈥淭he gaps are persistent and pervasive, and we鈥檙e not making much progress,鈥 said Jed Applerouth, the founder of Applerouth Tutoring Services, a national test-preparation company.

Weeks, too, said he was surprised and disappointed that college-readiness scores haven鈥檛 risen much, given the high priority that policymakers and teachers have been placing on that yardstick in recent years.

Critics have long attacked standardized tests as a false measure, arguing that they are better gauges of students鈥 socioeconomic profiles than their academic skill or potential.

Neil Chyten, the founder of the tutoring company Chyten Educational Services, based in Newton, Mass., said he doubts that any college-entrance-exam score truly means students have the knowledge and skills to succeed in college. They reflect specific skills 鈥渢hat can be taught in a relatively short time,鈥 not years of study, Chyten said.

Robert A. Schaeffer, the public education director for the National Center for Fair & Open Testing, which opposes high-stakes standardized tests, said in an email that the exam results reflect 鈥渕ore about ACT鈥檚 marketing wars with the College Board than anything meaningful about high school students.鈥

Like all standardized exams, the ACT showcases the differentials in performance between students with key advantages such as family income and education and those without them.

An ACT analysis looks at the performance of 鈥渦nderserved鈥 students by examining three criteria: whether students are from low-income families, belong to racial-minority groups, or would be the first in their families to attend college. The more criteria students meet, the less likely they are to score at ACT鈥檚 college-readiness benchmarks.

More than half the students who are not considered underserved met three or four of ACT鈥檚 college-ready benchmarks, compared with only 9 percent of those who met all the 鈥渦nderserved student鈥 criteria.

In STEM, a particularly rigorous benchmark created from students鈥 math and science scores, only 2 percent of the students who met all three underserved criteria reached the college-ready benchmark, but 31 percent of the more-advantaged students met it. Educators and policymakers have been urging students to consider careers that demand science, technology, engineering, and math skills, since those jobs are increasingly in demand and can pay well.

ACT also reported that many students don鈥檛 take advantage of the chance to take the exam for free. Low-income students qualify for fee waivers, but in the class of 2017, 28 percent of those who got the waivers didn鈥檛 end up taking the test.

Weeks said the ACT has been trying various strategies to address that problem, such as reminding students of their test dates by phone calls, emails, or texts. But many students have work obligations and transportation problems that interfere with weekend testing dates, he said.

A version of this article appeared in the September 13, 2017 edition of Education Week as 69传媒鈥 Scores Rise Slightly On ACT Exam

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