Friday, January 6, 2012

Mo' Rankings, Mo' Problems

The Washington Post published a skeptical look at college rankings today. Colleges are of course eager to use the lists in their marketing materials when the results are flattering. But when one list claims that Johns Hopkins University is one of the 15 "least rigorous" in the country and that Georgetown is a hipster mecca, then (according to a Johns Hopkins University spokesman) “the reaction around here was a collective scratch of the head and a unanimous ‘Huh?’

Monday, November 7, 2011

The Monday Excerpt: The Racist Roots of the SAT

Every other Monday, give or take, I will post a brief excerpt from my upcoming book, Choose Wisely: the SAT, the ACT, and You. This is good for you because you get to read, for free, what other people will have to pay for later. This is good for me because it means I have to actually write the book if I'm going to have anything to post! So, win-win.

Today's excerpt continues the story from a few weeks ago. One of the psychologists who worked on the Army Alpha and Beta tests - the first-ever standardized tests administered on a mass scale - has gone on to create the SAT. I'd like you to meet Carl Brigham, the man behind the test.

Monday, October 24, 2011

SAT/ACT Presentation Tomorrow!

This Wednesday, I'm giving a presentation at Washington-Lee High School called - shockingly - SAT or ACT: Choose Wisely! It's going to be fun and informative.  Details below.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

NOT the Monday Excerpt

I normally post an excerpt from my book on the SAT and the ACT on Mondays. This post is different for two reasons:

  1. It's not Monday
  2. It's not an Excerpt

The Clip Show, or You've Already Jumped the Shark
That's right, the Monday excerpt is taking a little break this week! I've been fairly busy with tasks relating to my second career as a photographer, and the book has temporarily been shifted to the... well, I wouldn't quite say the back burner, but perhaps the medium burner. Your stove has one of those, right?


So, in lieu of an excerpt, I will do the blog version of a clip show: the link post!

Monday, October 10, 2011

The Monday Excerpt: "Why are cats useful animals?"

Every Monday I will post a brief excerpt from my upcoming book, Choose Wisely: the SAT, the ACT, and You. This is good for you because you get to read, for free, what other people will have to pay for later. This is good for me because it means I have to actually write the book if I'm going to have anything to post! So, win-win.


This week's excerpt presents the gripping conclusion to the story of the army Alpha and Beta tests - the direct ancestors of the SAT.  If you missed last week's installment, check it out before you read this.

Monday, October 3, 2011

The Monday Excerpt: Uncle Sam and the Psychologists

Every Monday I will post a brief excerpt from my upcoming book, Choose Wisely: the SAT, the ACT, and You. This is good for you because you get to read, for free, what other people will have to pay for later. This is good for me because it means I have to actually write the book if I'm going to have anything to post! So, win-win.

In this week's excerpt, we learn a little bit about the direct ancestors of the SAT: the Army Alpha and Beta Tests.  If there are any psychologists in the audience, please don't be offended by the ire I direct at your profession: it is intended solely for a handful of your less-than-illustrious predecessors. You can read the beginning of this chapter here.



Tuesday, September 27, 2011

On Tutoring Companies, Part II: Stanley Kaplan's SAT

In this post I will pay my respects to the late Stanley Kaplan of the eponymous Kaplan Test Prep.  He was both the godfather and the midwife of test prep.  All of the countless books and classes out there - including my own - exist only because Kaplan blazed the trail.  He had a very particular view of what the SAT stood for.  Although I don't quite agree with him, I think that his perspective has a lot to teach us about the test.  (If you missed Part I of this series, you can catch it here.)


The SAT as an Engine of Opportunity


Stanley Kaplan, SAT insurgent.
In a fascinating article by Malcolm Gladwell, Kaplan emerges as an earnest, optimistic advocate for the underdog.  His guerrila-style assaults on the SAT's claims of uncoachability, carried out from the basement of his house in Brooklyn, make for a classic tale of American individual enterprise:
Kaplan would have "Thank Goodness It's Over" pizza parties after each S.A.T.  As his students talked about the questions they had faced, he and his staff would listen and take notes, trying to get a sense of how better to structure their coaching.  "Every night I stayed up past midnight writing new questions and study materials," he writes.  "I spent hours trying to understand the design of the test, trying to think like the test makers, anticipating the types of questions my students would face."
The most interesting aspect of Kaplan's crusade, to me, is that it was done not out of cynicism about the test, but out of deep respect.  Although Kaplan knew that the SAT's claim to measure innate ability was false, he also knew that the test provided an opportunity for disadvantaged students to get ahead by the sweat of their brows.  And when young Stanley was getting started, the "disadvantages" a student had to deal with might very well have a racial tinge.  In the 1940s several Ivy League colleges still had de facto Jewish quotas.  If you could do well enough on the new-fangled SAT, though, even those elite schools would have a hard time turning you down.  That is why
Stanley Kaplan was always pained by those who thought that what went on in his basement was somehow subversive. He loved the S.A.T. He thought that the test gave people like him the best chance of overcoming discrimination. As he saw it, he was simply giving the middle-class students of Brooklyn the same shot at a bright future that their counterparts in the private schools of Manhattan had.
Kaplan poopooed the SAT's claim to measure aptitude but idealized the test as an engine for social mobility.  His was a distinctly American vision: if you work hard enough (on the SAT), you'll get ahead.  As I explained in my most recent Monday Excerpt, it doesn't work that way anymore.  Those who do well on the SAT, nowadays, are almost exclusively those who are already pretty well off.


The Moral of the Story


Kaplan was wrong about the SAT's societal function.  His view nevertheless suggests that a national test might yet serve to help hard workers from all backgrounds shine.  Some have suggested using Subject Tests, and I am inclined to agree with them, at least in principle.  That is a matter for another post.  For now, let it suffice to say that Kaplan was decades ahead of his time in publicizing two important truths about the SAT: it doesn't measure innate ability, and it ought to help the little guy (or gal) get ahead.


Coming Up: Herr Professor Johannes Katzmann, Esq.

I had originally planned to talk about The Princeton Review's John Katzman in this same post.  As usual, I had too much to say.  Next time, I will deal with his very different take on the SAT.  Stay tuned!