Optional SATs Are Here to Stay

These numbers combine media English and math SAT scores. Data source: State Council of Higher Education for Virginia

by James A. Bacon

There are two broad trends driving change in the admissions policies of higher-ed institutions these days. The first is the declining number of students enrolling in colleges and universities. The other is the increasing philosophical commitment to increase demographic diversity, which in practice means admitting more “under-represented minorities.”

Arising from the second trend is an attack on standardized tests such as the SAT and ACT exams, which were designed to predict student success in college, as racist because they reflect subtle bias against minorities and create inequitable outcomes. Indeed, the very concept of using objective, meritocratic, non-race-based criteria has been criticized as inherently racist.

The last thing elite higher-ed institutions want to do is speak honestly about their intentions. Openly abandoning the meritocratic ideal or establishing racial quotas would create a furor. Instead, admissions offices create proxies for race/ethnicity such as raising the percentage of “first time” students (students who are the first in their family to attend college), or favoring applicants who overcame personal adversity, or recruiting students from a wider range of neighborhoods.

In their effort to engineer preferred demographic profiles of the student body, admissions officers find that mandatory SAT scores are an embarrassment.  Invariably, when median SAT scores for racial/ethnic groups are published, they show that Asians have the highest scores by far, suggesting that their bar for admissions is much higher than for other groups. Conversely, Blacks and Hispanics have lower SAT scores, indicating that their bar is much lower. SATs, once used to open up elite schools for Jews and minorities, now are viewed as an obstacle to social justice.

But colleges and universities still need SATs, if only to help distinguish the more meritorious members within each racial/ethnic classification. So, the optimal solution is not to do away with SATs, but to make them optional. And that is exactly what has happened in Virginia.

Almost every public university has made SATs optional. The shift to optional SATs was justified initially by the COVID-19 pandemic: a nod to students who were too wary of the virus to take the exam in public places. The COVID epidemic receded in severity this year, but mandatory SATs were not restored. It’s not clear if they ever will be.

Now that SATs are optional, a not-insignificant percentage of students applying to college are not submitting them. A reasonable conjecture is that the students who decline to submit their SAT scores are doing so because the scores are not competitive. Such behavior is entirely rational on their part. Median SAT scores are readily available on the Internet. There are even websites that allow students to enter their scores and calculate their odds of admission.

With lower scores being weeded out, one would anticipate that median SAT scores among those students who do submit them will trend higher. And that’s what we see in several instances in Virginia’s colleges and universities. As shown in the table above, based upon newly published data from the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia (SCHEV), median SAT scores increased at George Mason University, Longwood University, Old Dominion University, Mary Washington University, the University of Virginia, and the College of William & Mary, although most gains were marginal.

Meanwhile, SAT scores dropped precipitously at a number of institutions, most notably Norfolk State University, Virginia State University, and the University of Virginia-Wise campus — all of which serve lower-income student populations — and the Virginia Military Institute, which has suffered waves of negative publicity over alleged racism and sexism. The explanation for that, I hypothesize, can be attributed to the first of the two trends I mentioned above: the declining number of students enrolling in colleges and universities. Under pressure to keep up enrollment numbers, these institutions are being less selective in their admissions policies — SAT scores be damned.

That’s not a hard-and-fast conclusion. We’ll get a better feel when SCHEV publishes a separate data set on admission and acceptance rates. If it turns out that those institutions are admitting nearly everyone who applies, we can consider the hypothesis confirmed.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Supreme Court is due to reach a decision regarding racial preferences at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina. It is widely thought that the conservative justices will declare unconstitutional policies that clearly discriminate against Asians. But there are many ways to skin a cat. And if higher-ed institutions want to racially engineer their student demographics, there are more subtle ways to do it. We’ll be hearing a lot more about “holistic” admissions policies in the future.

Holistic policies may have some — dare I use the word — merit. There is something to be said for admitting students who show grit in overcoming adversity, even if their SAT scores are less than stellar. And there is a meritocratic case to be made against legacy admissions, which give preference to sons and daughters of alumni. In the end, I don’t expect the Supreme Court ruling to settle much. As long as the culture wars rage, admissions offices will find ways to admit whom they wish, and SOL scores will remain optional.


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74 responses to “Optional SATs Are Here to Stay”

  1. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    George Will also predicted the increase of universities no longer requiring the SAT and instead relying on a “holistic” examination of an application. https://greensboro.com/george-will-colleges-will-racially-discriminate-no-matter-how-the-supreme-court-rules/article_cd1a13cc-593b-11ed-9a1e-37797b2533fa.html

    If we are going to insist on admissions by “merit” (however that is defined), then the practice of giving legacies extra points or credit should be prohibited, as well. During the recent Supreme Court hearing, one Justice posed this question: If you have two applicants, one white and one Black, who score equally well on all objective measures, but the white student gets admitted because some of his parents and grandparents attended the school, how is that just since none of the black applicant’s forebears ever had the opportunity to attend the school? Giving a leg up to the applicant whose parents have deep pockets should also be prohibited.

    There are other considerations, besides race, that sometimes trump merit. A Yale admissions counselor told my son-in-law that, based on SAT scores, the university could admit every applicant from Thomas Jefferson School of Science and Technology, but it would not do that because it did not want that big a clutch of freshmen from one school.

    1. walter smith Avatar
      walter smith

      So…if you actually looked at real numbers…what you would find on “legacy” admissions is that they are pretty much in the sweet spot SAT wise. This likely reflects that the parents were smart enough to get into UVA back when it still gave an education, instead of a virtue-signal indoctrination…

      1. James McCarthy Avatar
        James McCarthy

        Bless those parents that were not admitted under legacy.

        1. walter smith Avatar
          walter smith

          Are you just jealous that you didn’t get in?
          Maybe the parents were not admitted by legacy.
          Where’s your proof!
          Blah Blah Blah
          In any event, the numbers as of the Class of 2026 would indicate that the legacies, while having a favorable rate of offer – 33% – were also having a Mean SAT squarely within the range.
          So, at present, legacy does not appear to be such an advantage factor.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            Walter could you define what “range” means and how would you determine what the range itself should be?

          2. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Stats from the UVA admissions office, which quit cooperating once they realized what I was asking would look bad.
            So UVA gave me Mean SAT by in-State, out of State, Legacy and non-Legacy by the racial classifications. That was too much data and too confusing to try to present in a easily understandable format.
            But…UVA claimed it could not give me the aggregate number Mean, even though they could break them down into all the sub-groups. That is why I have to refer to a range, but the mean would be somewhere between those ranges.

          3. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            Usual mumble fumble with the Deep State refusing to cooperate.

          4. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Read my answer to Larry. And try actually doing some work yourself, rather than just cry…

          5. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            The sobs are in your comments.

          6. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            Also, sounds like JAB is ghost writing for old Walt again…. why won’t old Walt pen his own pieces…?

          7. LarrytheG Avatar

            Wait! You got a LOT of data and you yourself cannot then use it to decide the range?

            Still not understanding your approach , general concept, once you got the data you seek.

          8. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            “That was too much data and too confusing to try to present in a easily understandable format.”

            Meaning it did not fit his narrative so he had to start cherry-picking…

          9. LarrytheG Avatar

            correct. When push comes to shove – trying to “figure it out” is a bridge too far so just arbitrary mandates based on ideology.

          10. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Let’s try again Larry.
            UVA has the data.
            By IPEDS classifications.
            UVA broke that data into subsets, by IPEDS, classifications of legacy, non-legacy, in State, out of State. There was either a Mean SAT # given, or no SAT # given because the sample size was less than 10. And remember, no SAT was required, so you range from SAT submission rates of 15% to 35%. In general, I think this reflects a self-selection issue of the higher performing being willing to send their scores in, and I think Jim’s article suggests that.
            I then asked UVA to give it to me in the aggregate IPEDS, instead of the four groups, and UVA refused. UVA clearly has the data. How else could it have broken it up? But, since it would be definitive proof and easier to understand of the reverse racial discrimination, UVA claimed it would not “create” a document. It is total BS. Why did they “create” the 4 statuses broken down by IPEDS class?
            So, I gave ranges – because I had ranges. But if it persists in ranges, it would persist in the Mean as well, absent an incredible numerical anomaly, which, requiring at least 10 to be in the set would make even harder.
            OK? Got it?

          11. LarrytheG Avatar

            so UVA gave you the subset data and you want THEM to aggregate it? You can’t?
            what do you need to do it?

            but WHY do you want this data in the first place? What would you use it for?

          12. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            To prove the reverse racial discrimination. Which it does. And you and all the other Lefties will then complain about the data, it is incomplete, etc, but it is what it is and that is what it points to.
            UVA is violating its own non-discrimination policy. Period. It is also violating the plain language of the law, even if the Supremes let it live. And our country should not depend upon 9 people as the Oracles of Delphi.

          13. LarrytheG Avatar

            the numbers don’t prove the actual policy, right. Correlation is not causation. Right?

          14. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Always the same thing…
            You believe in disparate impact analysis, right?
            And I think the numbers prove absolutely illegality. Which is why UVA quit cooperating…

          15. LarrytheG Avatar

            Nope. The number don’t prove actual policy, You’re looking at data and presuming the “how”.

            They quit cooperating because they know who you are and what you are trying to do. Why should they cooperate with you when you intend to harm them?

          16. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Because it’s the law? Larry, you are such a dupe. No matter how much evidence gets piled on, you will only see your beloved Leftists as the wonderful people they aren’t.
            And Larry, I have looked at the data and the policy and the admissions process and I can prove it…

          17. LarrytheG Avatar

            As you well know Walter, your view of the law and their view of the law may not be the same and unless you can “prove” they are actually violating the law then a lot depends on the nature of the relationship between you and they.

            And your idea of “evidence” is really a joke because you seem to be claiming that data proves what the actual policy is. As JAB blathers often but then promptly ignores as often as he says it – correlation is NOT causation!

            You’d need a smoking gun document to prove it conclusively,

            Not even a judge would buy your data argument. Even SCOTUS is talking about DOCUMENTED policies with respect to affirmative action – not data.

            re: ” And our country should not depend upon 9 people as the Oracles of Delphi.”

            Does that mean you do not believe in the way our country’s judicial system works?

          18. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Larry – other than Lefties in power, no matter what, what do you believe in?
            That seems to be the organizing principle
            And people lose cases on circumstantial evidence.
            UVA admin won’T write “let’s break the law,” they hide behind obfuscatory language and adopt policies to do that.
            And the legal system is screwed up. As is legal “education.”

          19. LarrytheG Avatar

            Actually I’m fine with moderate GOP in power – it’s the GOP crazies that I’m not.

            You can stop UVA from race-based discrimination – no question it will happen.

            But can you make UVA do it the way you think it should?

            I bet not.

            So what are you trying to achieve?

          20. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            You’re so dense, it hurts. FYI, I was the first in a family of first generation immigrants to go to college and beyond. I envied no one. Beyond your latest set of specious rant questions, where is your evidence?

          21. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            I have the evidence. Do you believe UVA engages in systemic racism?

          22. LarrytheG Avatar

            how would you prove it?

            be clear.

          23. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            Just don’t believe much of your so-called expositions wrapped in incoherent rants.

          24. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            Answer the question.
            You won’t because you suspect I may actually have the evidence (and I do). Just like you won’t gather the FEC data yourself because you know it won’t prove the point you wish to make to say the data doesn’t say what Jim Bacon thinks it said…

          25. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            So, Jim, was it a systemically racist country that let your family in, and then you went to college? How did that happen? Were you in Boston or NYC with the “No Irish” signs? Don’t think you are that old…

          26. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            No, when my parents immigrated the US was far more overtly racist. They entered partly due to legacy predecessors. I’m old enough to have witnessed overt racism and covert racism, or systemic if you prefer. Had I ever seen a “No Irish” need apply sign, I would have torn it down. Unlike your brotherhood, we did not suffer fools nor paranoia.

          27. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            OK. And I am old enough to have witnessed racism. I see it today. Mostly from people on the Left. Worse throughout the world. But far better in this country. And the current policies are counter-productive. Divisive. How did such a racist country allow you to succeed?
            And I doubt your allegations of bravery to No Irish signs…. It is easy to say, but you were not there, then, and that is why it is wrong to cancel the past.
            When you call out “your team” for racism, let me know. When you call out your team for violence, let me know. Hear about the white powder envelopes at Kari Lake’s HQ?
            Evil is evil whenever done and by whomever done.

    2. DJRippert Avatar

      “If we are going to insist on admissions by “merit” (however that is defined), then the practice of giving legacies extra points or credit should be prohibited, as well.”

      Agree.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        What law or Constitutional reason would REQUIRE merit-based admissions?

    3. Teddy007 Avatar

      What Congress should do is pass a law that any college that accepts federal money must submitted the SAT/ACT scores of all students who apply and who are accepted. The government should not require the use of the test scores in admission but just require that an SAT score be submitted for each student.
      The federal government would be creating the data to help students denied admission to be able to sue based upon disparate impact.

    4. LarrytheG Avatar

      So are we going to have folks advocate that the govt pass laws that REQUIRE some academic merit-based criteria to be used? I wonder if they would “allow” for certain cases like athletics or legacy situations?

      It would be a fun thing to watch the lobbying for and against!

    5. James McCarthy Avatar
      James McCarthy

      Now if athletic ability could be eliminated, many more places – and funds – would be available.

      1. Matt Adams Avatar
        Matt Adams

        False, if athletic ability was eliminated all schools would require Harvard Level trusts and less people would be going. Despite people’s hatred of athletic programs they pay the schools bill’s who don’t have endowments.

        You’re statement is likely from someone who couldn’t make it past gym class sports.

        1. James McCarthy Avatar
          James McCarthy

          Sorry I missed this inane retort and insult. You are probably the only person who believes athletic programs keep colleges in the black. Endowments contribute little to operating income in higher education; they function as guarantee against bankruptcy and as borrowing loan collateral. Y’all need to study up a bit.

    6. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Assuming every kid at TJSST wanted to go to Yale.

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9w-DuepzjxI

      1. Lefty665 Avatar

        They’ve lowered the admissions standards at TJSST so at least some would be likely to slum.

    7. LarrytheG Avatar

      So are we going to have folks advocate that the govt pass laws that REQUIRE some academic merit-based criteria to be used? I wonder if they would “allow” for certain cases like athletics or legacy situations?

      It would be a fun thing to watch the lobbying for and against!

  2. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    George Will also predicted the increase of universities no longer requiring the SAT and instead relying on a “holistic” examination of an application. https://greensboro.com/george-will-colleges-will-racially-discriminate-no-matter-how-the-supreme-court-rules/article_cd1a13cc-593b-11ed-9a1e-37797b2533fa.html

    If we are going to insist on admissions by “merit” (however that is defined), then the practice of giving legacies extra points or credit should be prohibited, as well. During the recent Supreme Court hearing, one Justice posed this question: If you have two applicants, one white and one Black, who score equally well on all objective measures, but the white student gets admitted because some of his parents and grandparents attended the school, how is that just since none of the black applicant’s forebears ever had the opportunity to attend the school? Giving a leg up to the applicant whose parents have deep pockets should also be prohibited.

    There are other considerations, besides race, that sometimes trump merit. A Yale admissions counselor told my son-in-law that, based on SAT scores, the university could admit every applicant from Thomas Jefferson School of Science and Technology, but it would not do that because it did not want that big a clutch of freshmen from one school.

  3. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    Can the state bar examinations, engineering PE tests and medical licensing for docs and nurses be far behind? We’ve already seen that in attacks on Praxis for teacher licensing or dilution of those cut scores.

    1. James McCarthy Avatar
      James McCarthy

      Yes, they can be very far behind ant not be compromised by the absolute equality of meritocracy. Stay on topic and avoid paranoia.

        1. DJRippert Avatar

          Yep. Once again, don’t fix the problem … lower the standards and pretend that all is well.

    2. killerhertz Avatar
      killerhertz

      How impressed are you with doctors in a post COVID landscape? I’m not. Credentialism at its best.

  4. DJRippert Avatar

    All part of the “hidden failure” program by the left. When you can’t educate people well enough to score well on a standardized test … don’t improve the education, eliminate the test. Same approach our state Gub’mint used when they lowered the cut scores. All is well with BigEd. Nothing to see here.

    1. James McCarthy Avatar
      James McCarthy

      Self fulfilling argument. Don’t question the standardization criteria of SATs or invite equity into the decision making. Also, it’s easier to ignore the collective experience of educators. What the hell do they know about education.

      1. walter smith Avatar
        walter smith

        Not much. They know politics.
        But could you explain why certain “groups” have a higher admission offer rate than other “groups?”
        Systemic racism?

        1. James McCarthy Avatar
          James McCarthy

          The answer is somewhere in the admissions process equitable judgments are made.

          1. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            But are the different rates of offer evidence of systemic racism? Under your stupid Leftist ideology, aren’t all rates supposed to be equal?

          2. James McCarthy Avatar
            James McCarthy

            Nope! Woke conservatives seek equality in the guise of meritocracy under their stupid Rightist ideology.

          3. walter smith Avatar
            walter smith

            So, do you want equality of outcome? Not a hard question? Are you a “nature-denier?” Seems so…

      2. DJRippert Avatar

        Educators. Lol. If you ask the executives of a failing company what is wrong, you’ll get plenty of answers. The economy. Previous decisions. Bad luck. Too little money for investment.

        It is only when you fire and replace the executives who occasioned the failure that progress begins.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          so HOW do your workers get THEIR education and what criteria do you use in hiring? Is it by academic merit?

          1. DJRippert Avatar

            The people I hire are experienced. Others in the company handle on-campus hiring. The experienced people are hired based on their experience, skills, interpersonal capabilities. I have no idea what their SAT scores or college GPAs were. I really don’t care if they graduated from college. And that’s the problem colleges are facing. At least in technology, things change so fast that whatever a student learned 10 years ago is pretty useless today. A lot of people are questioning the value of an overpriced 4 year degree and nor just those pursuing so-called trade jobs. These new jobs (not in traditional trades and not requiring a 4 year education) are dubbed “new collar jobs” by IBM’s former CEO, Ginni Rometty.

            Apparently the over-educated dimwits running America’s colleges and universities never took the economics courses offered at their institutions. There is only so much anybody can charge for anything before the price retards demand.

            https://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/outside-voices-careers/articles/what-to-know-about-new-collar-jobs

          2. john Harvie Avatar
            john Harvie

            Great answer.

          3. LarrytheG Avatar

            so it don’t matter what their SAT scores were or even their College academics?

            If a guy was a EE from UVA or MS in computer science from MIT, no dice?

  5. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Entrance exams?

    I remember a joke about an entrance exam given by St. Peter to get into Heaven. The questions were “Who was the first man?”, “Who was the first woman?”, and “How do you spell ‘chrysanthemum’?”

    I think it involved race, but I can’t remember which entrant of which race was given which question. Maybe a BR Culture Warrior could figure it out?

    Now, about swim tests…
    https://www.chronicle.com/newsletter/race-on-campus/2022-05-31

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      I recall jumping in and passing the test during orientation. If memory serves (less reliable these days) those that didn’t took a basic swim class pretty similar to the YMCA beginner class, and it was hardly a hardship as every freshman had to take some form of PE both semesters. So hardly a barrier based on race…

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        After taking a semester of basketball, do you think you’d have been able to dunk? Everyone has to take PE. Not much of a hardship.

  6. killerhertz Avatar
    killerhertz

    Academia is the reason we are stuck with all of this CRT, DEI wokeness. Academia told us to “trust the science”. The sooner they die a horrible fiery death in a car fire the better.

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      Would that be the same science that had medical doctors appearing in advertisements for cigarettes?

      Asking for a friend.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        If science is so bad, let ‘im eschew modern medicine altogether. Hey, if bleeding could cure Jefferson then what else does he need. Open a vein and let all that Republican out.

        1. Lefty665 Avatar

          There’s Dem leeches too.

        2. killerhertz Avatar
          killerhertz

          Science is great. “The science” is a cult.

        3. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          There was nothing wrong with science till some @ssholes figured out that they could co-opt it to pursue a political agenda.

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Or… deny it for the same reason. And that’s a much, much older trick. Think Catholic Church.

          2. LarrytheG Avatar

            Conservatives have NEVER really been a fan of “science” from the get go!

            Luddites from way back, flat earth society, anti-vaxxers (long before covid), fake moon landing, fake mass killings, “deniers” of a range of things – then adding their own beliefs and conspiracy theories that suit them better.

            Can’t possibly be real climate change so it easily goes to “science is also lying about Covid” to “can’t lose elections”.

          3. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            Nihilism basically….

  7. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “Indeed, the very concept of using objective, meritocratic, non-race-based criteria has been criticized as inherently racist”

    So we should put you down as a Carl Brigham fan then…?

    “According to all evidence available, then, American intelligence is declining, and will proceed with an accelerating rate as the racial admixture becomes more and more extensive.”

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