Thursday, July 9, 2020

Reuters breaks major story on SAT cheating in Asia

As predicted, the College Boards decision to bar tutors from the first administration of the new SAT had little effect on the  security of the test; questions from the March 5th administration of the new SAT  quickly made an appearance on various Chinese websites as well as College Confidential.   Reuters has now broken a major story detailing the SAT cartels that have sprung up  in Asia, as well as the  College Boards inconsistent and lackluster response to  what is clearly a serious and widespread problem. Its a two-part series, and it clearly takes the College Board  to task for allowing the breaches. As SAT was hit by security breaches, College Board went ahead with tests that had leaked How Asian test-prep companies swiftly exposed the brand-new SAT The fact that old SATs (particularly those used for international administrations) are regularly recycled has been the College Boards  dirty not-so-little secret for a while now. Apparently, that practice will continue with the new exam. What even people  who are aware that the College Board recycles tests do typically realize, however, is that the organization does so according a pattern, and thus tutors/companies in the know can often predict which test will be administered in a given location and prepare their students accordingly. One way of mitigating the problem would of course be to create single-use tests; however, those would be more expensive to produce and would not solve the problem of test-takers in  earlier time zones passing questions and answers to test-takers in later ones.   In addition, SATs test forms have disappeared from the locked boxes in which they were sent (the problem is described in more detail on this College Confidential thread). The problem also lies with the testing centers and proctors themselves. And since students are reconstructing the tests, this is not something that can be solved by barring tutors from the exam.   Interestingly, this  is  the first major article Ive encountered to openly call attention to the  the stake that the College Board and colleges themselves   has in allowing the cheating to continue.  Because international students almost uniformly pay sticker price, they are a major source of revenue for colleges. They also provide a steady stream of STEM students (although the numbers are higher at the graduate level than at the undergraduate level). Not coincidentally, China sends more students to the United States than any other country; indeed, the number of Chinese students has nearly doubled from about 160,000 in 2010-11 to around 300,000 in 2014-15. You can also read the College Boards response, according to which  the leaks are the merely fault of a handful of bad actors.    Tellingly, there  is not a single mention of the recycled tests.   Also tellingly, David Coleman failed to comment.