How the other half tests: millions of Americans are denied the chance to take college-level courses by a downscale version of the SAT.

AuthorHeadden, Susan

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Like many other two-year college students, Monica Dekany has taken the long route to a degree. After graduating from high school in Glenelg, Maryland, in 1990, she enrolled in a local community college. Her grades were good there, but her direction was lacking. She dropped out, took a job at a fast-food restaurant, moved across the country, and then tried again at Utah State University in 1992. Again, she was able to pass her courses--with As, sometimes--hut she still wasn't sure of what she wanted to study, and eventually she stopped going to school. It wasn't until many years, several jobs, and one child later that she decided to give college another try. In 2009, she enrolled at Golden West College in Huntington Beach, California, a two-year institution that, like most community colleges, accepts all who apply. Dekany was disappointed that most of her credits from the two other colleges wouldn't transfer, but no matter: she was motivated enough to start building credits anew.

All she had to do, the registrars told her after she paid her fee, was go down a hallway, pick a cubicle, sidle up to a computer terminal, and take a short test. The "Accuplacer," as the test is called, was no big deal, they said--nothing she could have studied for. It was just so they could see where she was. Dekany took one test in math and another in English, and was "floored," as she put it, to learn that she had scored at a level that would consign her to remedial classes, reviews of fundamental material for which she would receive no college credit. "It caught me totally off guard," Dekany says. The other colleges had let her enroll directly in college-level English and literature classes, and as her transcripts dearly showed, she had passed them. But Golden West told her the test results were all that mattered.

Dekany dutifully enrolled in, and paid for, the remedial--or what colleges euphemistically call "developmental"--courses. She knew everything in the English course already; her daughter's seventh-grade English class was more advanced. Her math course was similarly low level, but it was taught by a sympathetic professor who helped save her from further remedial work. The college had mandated that Dekany take a second remedial math class before being allowed to take Math 100 for college credit, but her professor thought the requirement made no sense--she was clearly ready for college work. So he arranged for her to take Math l00 at Cal State, Long Beach, where he happened to also teach, and there she got an A.

Dekany went on to excel in college. She's a member of the Alpha Gamma Sigma honors society, a reporter for the Golden West college newspaper, and the school's homecoming queen. She's just a semester away from getting her associate's degree in social science and on her way to a bachelor's in counseling. But there's no getting back what the Accuplacer took from her. Remediation cost her several thousand dollars and set her education and her career back by a year. And if not for her math professor, it would have been even worse.

Dekany barely managed to dodge a fate that is very common among American college students. About 40 percent of them--a total of almost seven million people--go to community colleges, and millions more attend nonselective four-year universities. The vast majority of those institutions require students to take placement tests like the Accuplacer, and more than half the students who take those tests end up in remediation. Unlike Dekany, most students who are assigned to remediation don't make it through. Some never even show up for class. Others flunk out. Still more get discouraged and quit.

To be sure, open-access colleges need to assess the knowledge and abilities of incoming students. Dysfunctional public high schools routinely grant diplomas to students who lack basic math and reading skills. As a result, many new college students need help in order to grapple with college-level work. The problem is that colleges have chosen to deal with that challenge by diverting huge numbers of students into a parallel remedial education system with a dismal track record of helping students ultimately graduate from college. Compounding the problem, most colleges place students into the remediation track using nothing more than the results of a short, inexpensive, one-shot multiple-choice test of questionable accuracy...

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