When the pandemic struck, it had a radical impact on college
admissions. This bled into many areas. Potential students couldn’t tour
schools. Many weren’t compelled to pay tuition at a school in another town when
they were just going to be remoting in their classes anyways. Some students
have been challenged to even finish high school while faced with quarantines
and different educational formats than they are used to. However, one of the
main effects COVID 19 has had on college admissions is seen in the old college
admissions staple of standardized testing.
When the pandemic started in the spring of 2020, the SAT and ACT
canceled all of their upcoming tests. Testing resumed in the fall but many
students were not comfortable entering public settings to take a test and many
test centers remained closed. Perhaps the testing services would have
considered virtual options, but those can be tricky and the cheating scandal
that happened the previous year did nothing to promote those.
So, with many students cut off from the ability to take tests, how
were so many colleges supposed to require them? The logical approach for many
(but not all) colleges was to go test optional.
Prior to the pandemic, this practice had been trending in college
admissions. So, it wasn’t unheard of it. Still, there were many schools that
previously relied on testing. The tests’ function is to provide a comparative
basis for students who come from a variety of high school settings and
backgrounds. The SAT and ACT are the national standard for high school
students.
Without this information, schools that do not require test scores
have seen an uptick in applications. Students who may have felt their scores
were a liability for admission are now emboldened to apply. This has proven to
be a challenge for colleges. Those who made the switch were used to having test
scores as an evaluation tool. They are now forced to evaluate an even larger
application pool with less data.
I think that colleges are still trying to figure out the best
approach to this. This isn’t the first time they’ve evaluated students and
their experience is worth a lot, but I would imagine we’ll see college
retention rates take small dips as some students struggle to keep up at
colleges they might not have previously gotten into. From the student
perspective, just because you might be able to get into a certain school,
doesn’t necessarily mean you should go there. Success in college is all about
finding the right fit. A student and their college are partners in education and
if you don’t fit with that partner, the experience will lag. Going to a college
that simply exceeds your aptitude could have disastrous life-long consequences,
so be honest with yourself in this regard.
I suspect that colleges are using this time to reevaluate their
admissions process and the criteria they use for their decisions. Time will
tell how their process evolves. In the meantime, students have the opportunity
to consider some schools that have been out of reach for them before, but they
would do well to keep in mind how the traditional demographics of that school
align with their own skill set.
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