College Board - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com Great College Advice Thu, 28 Aug 2025 17:24:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/758df36141c47d1f8f375b9cc39a9095.png College Board - College Admission Counseling https://greatcollegeadvice.com 32 32 The Demise of the SAT2 Subject Tests: Good News or Bad News for College Admission? https://greatcollegeadvice.com/the-demise-of-the-sat2-subject-tests-good-news-or-bad-news-for-college-admission/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-demise-of-the-sat2-subject-tests-good-news-or-bad-news-for-college-admission Thu, 21 Jan 2021 17:02:52 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=42781 Hooray! The SAT2 Subject Tests are dead! But what does this news really mean for admission to highly selective colleges like the Ivy League? What will it mean for the colleges, for high schools, and for the College Board? A top college admission advisor prognosticates.

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This week there was a general outcry of “huzzah” and “hallelujah” in College Admissions Land.  The College Board announced yesterday that the SAT2 Subject Tests would be eliminated.

As the Munchkins of Oz might have sung, “Ding Dong, The Wicked Subject Tests are Dead!”

But, as with the death of any reviled demon, the question remains, “what’s next”?

What will this mean for competitive students?  What will it mean for the elite colleges that have required them?  What will it mean for the College Board, the creators of the now-defunct demon?

It’s hard to predict every ramification of this change in the college admissions landscape.  However, tapping into the collective experience and expertise of the team at Great College Advice, we have come up with a list of “Good News and Bad News” to anticipate what is next.

We’d like to hope that College Admissions Land will become a more peaceful and tranquil place, now that the subject tests are gone.

And yet experience tells us there are unseen forces at work that could raise the specter of other, lesser demons that may gain more power and rise to terrorize aspirants to top colleges and universities.

So let’s have a peek.  Maybe things will get better.  Or maybe they won’t.  Either way, perhaps we can be prepared for whatever the future slings at us.

GOOD: Less stress for applicants (and their parents)

It’s wonderful that students will have one less standardized test to take in the college admissions process.  The respite from spending time strategizing which tests to take, preparing for those exams, and losing yet another Saturday morning worshipping the false idol that is the College Board will bring a great sigh of relief to students, parents, and college counselors everywhere.

GOOD: Less money spent on tutors for the SAT2 Subject Tests

The process of preparing and applying to college can be expensive, and the SAT Subject Tests have been one of the streams of cash leaving the pockets of parents and stuffing the pockets of the College Board.

GOOD: More colleges may become entirely test optional

Approximately 550 colleges and universities dropped testing requirements during the coronavirus pandemic.  About 1100 colleges and universities already were test optional.  As the testing organizations scrambled, some colleges have been learning how to evaluate applications without test scores, and we predict that at least half—perhaps more—of the newly test optional schools will remain test optional permanently.

GOOD: School counselors will not have to administer SAT2 Subject Tests on behalf of the College Board ever again

School counselors everywhere will celebrate that they no longer must give up their own Saturdays to proctor these tests.  However, these celebrations will be brief, as the same school counselors will still have to administer the “regular” SAT and ACT for a long time to come.


BAD: One fewer objective measure in the admissions process

While the SAT Subject Tests had dubious value in measuring the content knowledge of college applicants, they constituted one objective measure in the admissions process.  Test takers received a score.  A number.  Something that could be compared from one student to the next.  Never mind that the comparison didn’t really tell us much.  At least it was an objective indicator of something… something that admissions officers could use to separate the “good” applicants from the “bad” ones.

No one is happier to see these tests go than I, but their disappearance just makes the whole admissions process more subjective.  Colleges call this subjectivity “a holistic review,” which sounds much more humane.  Yet, whether you call it “subjective” or “holistic,” the process has very few objective guideposts—which leaves everyone scrambling to divine what it is colleges are really looking for.  When colleges say, “we look at it all,” what does that really mean?  How does a young person prepare for a holistic or subjective (or just plain opaque) review process?

BAD: Increased importance of the SAT and ACT tests themselves

With the extinction of SAT Subject Tests, the SAT and ACT will become even more important, especially for highly selective private universities and for flagship state universities.  Because GPAs are not consistent from district to district and school to school, and because curriculum offerings can also vary widely, using measures of “academic performance” and “academic rigor” remain pretty darned subjective.  It’s hard to compare apples to oranges.  So standardized tests are a handy (if imperfect) means to compare students in wildly divergent scholastic circumstances.

This is actually why the SAT (and then later, the ACT) were developed:  to give college admissions offices a tool to compare students against a norm of some kind.  Again, the tests are deeply flawed mechanisms to do so.  But since the United States has no nation-wide secondary school exit exam (as they do in almost every other country in the world), the colleges themselves had to invent something to help them at least attempt to level the playing field.  So don’t expect the SAT or ACT to go away.  Expect them to retain their place in college admissions, especially for state universities and elite private institutions.

GOOD: Less revenue to the College Board Death Star

The College Board bills itself as a public entity, preparing young people for higher education.  Whatever the mission printed on the website, or whether it uses a “.org” URL, or however the organization is legally constituted, the fact is that the College Board (like the ACT) is a business. Its not-for-profit tax status does not change its behavior:  the College Board is a rent-seeking organization propelled by capitalistic incentives.

The College Board made a business decision to eliminate the Subject Tests.  Fewer and fewer universities have been requiring them, and even some of the Ivies abandoned them in the past few years.  The profit margin on these tests became so small that it squeezed them out of existence.  In the absence of adequate demand, the College Board simply eliminated a product line.  It happens all the time in business (anyone want to buy my old Sony Walkman Betamax…please?).

Rest assured, the College Board itself is not going out of business:  the Death Star still shines.  The SAT is as healthy as ever, and it will be undergoing some new updates soon, including the long-awaited roll-out of its online version.  The College Board wants consumers and colleges to depend on them for making the admissions process both manageable and valuable, so they will do what they can to continue innovating, growing, and expanding—just as we would expect of any healthy business.

RIP, Subject Tests.  But Long Live the College Board!


Video Course for College Admissions

BAD: Possible increase in importance of the AP tests (the Death Star pulls out its other weapon)

As the College Board kills one product line, we anticipate that it will focus on the strength of its other tried-and-true products.  In addition to its flagship exam, the Advanced Placement program is a wildly successful revenue stream.

The AP program takes advantage of one of the other peculiar features of the US educational system:  we have no common national curriculum.  Since we cannot compare students’ performance from state to state, district to district, and school to school because of the decentralized nature of our educational system, the private sector has stepped in to supply what the government has not:  a national, college preparatory curriculum.  The AP delivers the syllabi to schools and requires parents to pick up the tab for the examinations at nearly $100 a pop.

To reiterate, since the federal government does not develop and maintain a national curriculum, the incentives of capitalism do it for us.  In 2019, the College Board administered nearly 5.1 million Advanced Placement exams—up from 1.4 million in 2000.  That rate of increase would make any CEO swell with pride.  And this meteoric growth of the AP has helped swell the College Board’s cash reserves, which were estimated at $1.15 billion in 2018.

BAD: More high schools may feel compelled to offer Advanced Placement courses

High schools base their own success on two metrics:  the percentage of students who graduate with a high school diploma, and the percentage of students who go on to college.  Many will also tout the colleges and universities to which their students have been accepted (often you’ll see the roster of college acceptances on the high school’s website).

If high schools want to make their students competitive, then more may feel compelled to adopt the curriculum and administer the exams.

However, not every school will have the resources to be able to implement the Advanced Placement program.  Rural schools, in particular, may be unable to do so—they’re having enough trouble gassing up their buses, paying competitive salaries for highly qualified teachers, fixing the leaky roof, and paying the electric bill.  And some of the fancy private day and boarding schools will not need or want to offer the AP curriculum, preferring to offer their own boutique courses, such as “Gender and Power in Tudor England” (Philips Andover) or “Biological Oceanography” (The Cate School).

BAD: More students may feel compelled to self-study for the AP exams

Self-study!  Students can prep for the exams themselves, even if their schools do not offer these courses.  They can perhaps complete a dual enrollment course at their local community college or nearby university, and then take the AP exam.  They can hire a tutor to prep them for the course, and then pay for that AP exam.  Or they can just access free or low-cost materials to help themselves prepare.

My students from China do this all the time.  Kids in International Baccalaureate programs sometimes add Advanced Placement exams to their already full plate. And even kids who attend elite boarding schools like Philips Andover (including ones I have advised) will self-study for AP exams, even though their teachers and administrators, and even yours truly, beg them not to. (Incidentally, my student who did self-study for 3 AP exams, aced all three and was admitted to Harvard…so apparently the strategy works.)

The fact is that the demand for AP exams will continue to rise.  While the Subject Tests have gone the way of New Coke, the Edsel, and Pan Am Airways, the College Board’s Advanced Placement program is more like Amazon Prime.  If you could purchase stock shares in the College Board, I’d rate them a “buy.”

GOOD: Continued competition between the College Board and ACT on their signature tests

Capitalism creates and thrives on competition.  It is healthy.  It fuels innovation.  Fortunately, competition is alive and well in the college preparatory standardized test space.  The ACT and SAT are fighting tooth and nail for market share.  And in some ways, the elimination of the Subject Tests is part of the cycle of capitalistic decay and renewal.  ACT introduced the first online version of its signature test.  The SAT is moving to roll out its own online version (after an aborted attempt about a year ago).  Each company continues to tweak its test, presumably to make it a better measure of college readiness.

Whether or not these tweaks really are innovations, we can count on both organizations to serve their various clientele:  the colleges, the states that require their use as part of what used to be called “No Child Left Behind,” the schools that use their curricula, and the parents who pay for the exams.  Students, however, have little say in the matter.  Cogs in the machine.  Bricks in the wall.

Kind of depressing, actually.

But perhaps there is one bright spot, albeit a brief one:  Kids, you have one less set of exams to worry about.  Enjoy the feeling for as long as it lasts.

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Are You a High School Junior? It’s Time For The PSAT! https://greatcollegeadvice.com/are-you-a-high-school-junior-its-time-for-the-psat/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=are-you-a-high-school-junior-its-time-for-the-psat Sun, 14 Oct 2012 08:56:45 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=11950 The PSAT is a great jump start to your standardized testing preparation for the college admissions process. Not only does it give you the chance to practice for the SAT, it gives you access to scholarship searches, and college information.

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Are you a high school junior? If so, it’s time to take the PSAT!
The Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT) is a program cosponsored by the College Board and National Merit Scholarship Corporation (NMSC).

The PSAT/NMSQT is a great way to jump start your standardized testing. Not only is it a test that provides practice for the SAT but it also gives you an opportunity to enter NMSC scholarship programs.

The PSAT/NMSQT test dates are typically in October. In order to participate, you must sign up at your high school or at another school in your community. 

As you prepare, remember that this test measures three specific things:

  • Critical reading skills
  • Math problem-solving skills
  • Writing skills

This test can be a great opportunity to see where your strengths and weaknesses lie and gain a better understand of what you may need to study in preparation for the SAT. In addition, you may find yourself receiving a lot of great college information and mailings if you  check “yes” to Student Search Service when completing the test.
To learn more about this test, please visit The College Board. If you are interested in developing a testing plan and schedule for yourself, or for your student, please let us know and contact us at Great College Advice.
Good luck on the test!
 

 

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There are no SAT Tests in the Summer! https://greatcollegeadvice.com/there-are-no-sat-tests-in-the-summer/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=there-are-no-sat-tests-in-the-summer Wed, 02 May 2012 18:52:19 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=10543 Summer seems like a good time to take an SAT test. Think again....

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It often comes as a surprise when parents and students realize there are no SAT tests offered over the summer.
Given that the College Board offers tests practically all year long, it makes little sense that there are no standardized tests offered during the one time of year when students actually have more time to study for them!
May 8th is the deadline for signing up for the June SAT test – aka the last test before summer.
Of course if you’d like to give the College Board an more money, go ahead and wait for the late registration deadline so that instead of $49, you can give them $75.  Personally, I have better ways of spending $26 and I’m guessing you do too.
On June 2nd, students can take either the SAT Reasoning Tests (ie, the main SAT) or they can take selected SAT Subject Tests.
BUT- Students can’t take both the SAT Reasoning test and the Subject Tests at the same time.  They must be taken on different test dates.
If you take your SAT in June, you’ll have online results in less than three weeks.  If you’re not happy with your scores, you can always take the test again in October and/or November and/or December.
Many Seniors see their SAT scores go up in their Senior Fall.  Why? Because they are more mature.

Great College Advice

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Which Test Scores Should I Send? https://greatcollegeadvice.com/which-test-scores-should-i-send/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=which-test-scores-should-i-send Mon, 05 Dec 2011 17:39:33 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=9416 Applying to college and not sure which test scores to send? Here are a few tips.

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As students are wrapping up their college applications, making sure transcripts are sent, letters of recommendation submitted, and essays completed there is always the question of sending the test scores.
A number of years ago the decision was easy in regards to which test scores to send to a college. Students were typically taking only one type of test (either the SAT or ACT) and often were only taking the test once.
Today, many students are trying their hand at both the SAT and the ACT to see which they perform better on. Not only that, students are taking each test multiple times. Therefore, for many students, it can be confusing to know which scores to send to a college. A few tips:
 
1) Many schools do what they call “superscore.” This means it can be to your advantage to send scores from multiple seatings of a test as the college will combine your best individual sections to give you the best possible overall composite score to use in the decision of your application.
2) If you do not plan to send all of your scores, at least make sure to mark down all the tests that you took, and the dates you took them, on your application so that a college can request them if they want to see them.
3) Check out this handy chart to see how your ACT and SAT scores align. This chart was completed after a study by the ACT and the College Board and is designed to look at the relationship between two scores on the ACT and SAT. While this chart does not equate scores it does provide a helpful tool for looking up comparable scores.
 
 
 
Image credit: https://www.darienps.org/neirad/images/act_sat_l.jpg

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More Opinions on Advanced Placement https://greatcollegeadvice.com/more-opinions-on-advanced-placement/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=more-opinions-on-advanced-placement Thu, 28 Jan 2010 15:19:38 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=3811 One of our most commented on posts is “Which is Better: AP or IB?” In the post, Mark Montgomery highlights the differences between the two academic programs.  Recently, the NY Times published a piece where five different professionals offered opinions on the expanding Advanced Placement program.  The article states that the number of students taking […]

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One of our most commented on posts is “Which is Better: AP or IB?” In the post, Mark Montgomery highlights the differences between the two academic programs.  Recently, the NY Times published a piece where five different professionals offered opinions on the expanding Advanced Placement program.  The article states that the number of students taking Advanced Placement courses has risen nearly 50% from 2004 to 2009.  For some, this vast increase is cause for concern.  For others, there is a need to expand AP courses, especially to low-income and minority groups.
As mentioned in our previous post above, whether or not a student should enroll in AP (or IB for that matter) courses depends on the student’s ability and preparation.  Of course colleges want to see students enrolled in the most challenging curriculum available, however it is also about the grades that the student receives.  Students, parents and guidance counselors should work together to determine the best curriculum match for the students abilities.  That is the best way to ensure the student has a strong academic performance.

Educational Consultant

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Hate the SAT and ACT? Me Too, But Colleges Still Love These Tests https://greatcollegeadvice.com/hate-the-sat-and-act-colleges-love-these-tests/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=hate-the-sat-and-act-colleges-love-these-tests Mon, 11 Jan 2010 18:22:16 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=3125 Perhaps the most vexing aspect of college admissions in the United States today is the use and abuse of standardized tests.  While there is no solid research to support their pivotal role in determining who is accepted and who is rejected by the nation’s colleges and universities, the fact is that they are a competitive […]

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Perhaps the most vexing aspect of college admissions in the United States today is the use and abuse of standardized tests.  While there is no solid research to support their pivotal role in determining who is accepted and who is rejected by the nation’s colleges and universities, the fact is that they are a competitive credential.  The better your scores, the better your chances of admission.  Of course, high scores alone will not guarantee you anything but a wet, sloppy kiss from your proud parents.  But all other things being equal, good scores are preferable to low ones.
Much has been written about the history of these tests, and we have described the differences between the ACT and the SAT elsewhere on this blog.  Suffice it to say that the growth of these two tests can be attributed to colleges’ need for some sort of thumbnail comparison of students across schools, across states, and across curricula.  The fact is that with 14,000 school districts and perhaps 2,000 more private high schools in the US, there is little standardization from one school to the next. So it has always been difficult to judge the correlation of 4.0 GPA from an inner-city high school on the South Side of Chicago from a 4.0 GPA from Phillips Exeter.  Supposedly, the standardized tests are a leveler–they help admissions folks compare students from different schools in different parts of the country.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t work that way.  Here’s some reasons why.
First, there is no correlation between success on these tests and success in college.  This correlation is generally assumed to exist:  if you do better on the exams, you are therefore smarter and better able to succeed in college.  In fact, research undertaken by Bates College in Maine demonstrates confirms the absence of any such correlation.
Second, the SAT and ACT tests are not “levelers.”  Quite the opposite.  What research we do have on these tests demonstrates that students of lower socio-economic classes do worse on these exams than do students from more affluent backgrounds.
Third, these tests do not really measure either intellectual capacity or aptitude; they  measure performance on these specific tests.  It is possible, therefore, to cram for these tests and improve scores–without taking more high school courses or taking steroids to improve brain capacity.  Thus, a multi-billion dollar test prep industry has developed to help students cram for the tests.  While not all test prep courses or tutoring will lead to a significant score increase, some test prep can lead to dramatic increases.  A recent study from the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC) indicates that test prep courses and tutoring will raise scores, on average, by only 20 or 30 points on the SAT tests and perhaps only a point on the ACT.
However, I have seen students make very dramatic gains by working one-on-one with a very experienced, very talented private tutor. Thus my interpretation of the NACAC data is that most test prep is pretty lackluster.  If a student really wants to raise his score, he will have to seek stronger test prep services from those who know what they are doing.
I don’t recommend test preparation for all  my clients.  Much depends on what sort of schools interest them, and whether their first round of testing was good enough to allow them to achieve their goals.  But if their scores fall short of those goals, I will work with them to identify good resources to help them do their best.  For while I don’t think that these scores have much to say about a student’s abilities or potential, they have become very important in competitive college admissions.

College Planner and Adviser

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Average SAT Goes Up! and Down! https://greatcollegeadvice.com/average-sat-goes-up-and-down/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=average-sat-goes-up-and-down Wed, 26 Aug 2009 20:43:00 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=2903 It’s always fun when two different–and reputable–publications report the same story and lead them with different headlines. The facts: the College Board reported that the average score on the SAT tests last year went down slightly. The averages were 501 for critical reading, 515 for mathematics and 493 for writing. Inside Higher Ed led this […]

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It’s always fun when two different–and reputable–publications report the same story and lead them with different headlines.

The facts: the College Board reported that the average score on the SAT tests last year went down slightly. The averages were 501 for critical reading, 515 for mathematics and 493 for writing.

Inside Higher Ed led this story with the headline “SAT Scores Drop, Gaps Grow.” This publication chose to emphasize that while the overall scores did not decline all that much, the “achievement gap” between white kids and kid “of color” have widened slightly. As more students take the test, it becomes more and more apparent that black and Latino children are not performing as well as their white counterparts. (Note that when we talk about the “achievement gap,” we are not generally referring to the widening gap between Asian Americans and white kids…but that gap is widening, too. Nor are we emphasizing the gap in performance between boys and girls…but that gap exists, too).

The New York Times, on the other hand, led the same story with the headline “SAT Scores Steady for Class of ’09.”  The emphasis here was on the fact that while there was a slight decline in the average critical reading, the average math scores held steady.  The article does point out, however, that these gaps in achievement according to ethnicity, gender, and socio-economic class are increasing, in part because more and more minority students are taking the tests (40% of test takers were minorities in 20009, up form 48% in 2008).

Just goes to show you that the headline does not convey the entire picture, and different publications with different editorial policies will choose to emphasize different things in their articles.

On this particular story, I prefer the Inside Higher Ed version.  It gives a bunch more information, including a breakdown of scores by ethnicity and with some comparisons of scores between 2009 and 2005.  While the average yearly decline is not great, the decline over five years is more pronounced.

Mark Montgomery
Educational Planner



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SAT, Score Choice, and the Business of Standardized Testing https://greatcollegeadvice.com/sat-score-choice-and-the-business-of-standardized-testing/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sat-score-choice-and-the-business-of-standardized-testing Thu, 08 Jan 2009 06:19:04 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=1463 Today’s edition of Inside Higher Ed presents an excellent analysis of the College Board’s new policy allowing students to select which of their SAT scores they’d like to submit to colleges. Ostensibly, this new policy is to alleviate the stress of taking the tests, and to give more power to students in the admissions process. […]

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Today’s edition of Inside Higher Ed presents an excellent analysis of the College Board’s new policy allowing students to select which of their SAT scores they’d like to submit to colleges.

Ostensibly, this new policy is to alleviate the stress of taking the tests, and to give more power to students in the admissions process. However, at the same time, the College Board is telling colleges that they can have their own policies with regard to “Score Choice,” thereby eliminating any real “choice” by the students. Colleges still retain the right to see whatever scores they want to see.

As the article points out, the College Board is talking out of both sides of its mouth. To its student customers, it is saying, “we’re here for you…we care about your pain and suffering.” To it’s college and university customers, it is saying, “we’ll help you implement your policies and subvert student choice, if that’s what you want.”

Face it, folks. Higher education is a multi-billion dollar business in the USA. Colleges and universities act as businesses. The College Board is a company. It may be classified as a “non-profit” for tax purposes, but it has revenue goals like any other economic entity. And College Board competes in our capitalistic system alongside the ACT.

The problem is that the College Board has two sets of customers whose needs and interests are, if not diametrically opposed, at least in conflict. The College Board sits squarely between the colleges–who want ways to compare apples to oranges in an educational environment that is chaotically diverse–and high school students–who want the opportunity to present themselves in the best possible light with the minimum of stress.

My advice to clients is to not to get caught up in a frenzy. Test scores are important aspects of the overall application process, especially to the most selective colleges. While I have seen a few students make huge leaps in their performance on these tests, most make only modest gains–even after extensive (and often expensive) test preparation tutoring. I do not think that these tests are particularly fair. Nor do I believe that they are measures of aptitude or predictors of future success. And I applaud colleges who dare to move away from using them.

But it doesn’t do high school juniors and seniors much good to get agitated, indignant, stressed, or depressed. The tests aren’t fair? Well, life isn’t fair And it we may as well start learning this little fact at age 17.

So again, what do I tell my clients?
–Prepare the best you can.
–Make realistic goals based on the reality of the numbers.
–Develop a strategy to present yourself in the best light possible.
–Do not allow your test scores or grades to define you as human being.
–Remember that there are many paths to success–and it’s never too late to choose a different one.

In short, let the professional educators, policy makers, and people like me rail against the unfairness and silliness of it all. For now, just do your work, enjoy your life, and have confidence that you have many wonderful opportunities ahead.

Great College Advice

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Tuition Costs Went Up. What a Surprise! https://greatcollegeadvice.com/tuition-costs-went-up-what-a-surprise/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=tuition-costs-went-up-what-a-surprise Thu, 30 Oct 2008 17:23:35 +0000 https://greatcollegeadvice.com/?p=1178 The annual report from the College Board indicates that the cost of tuition went up last year.  On average, costs increased from 5-6%, depending on the type of institution.  If you want more specifics, you can see the summary of the report in today’s edition of Inside Higher Ed. The big question is how much […]

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The annual report from the College Board indicates that the cost of tuition went up last year.  On average, costs increased from 5-6%, depending on the type of institution.  If you want more specifics, you can see the summary of the report in today’s edition of Inside Higher Ed.

The big question is how much colleges will have to raise tuition in the next budget cycle.  A lot will depend on how their admission and financial aid numbers look.  But most colleges set their budgets for the coming year before the incoming class has been accepted–much less made commitments to attend by putting down deposits.  I expect colleges will be very conservative in the coming budget cycle.  Will colleges and universities raise tuition?  Is the sky blue?  Of course they will raise tuition.  But will prices rise by a much higher percentage than in the past?  Hard to tell at this point.

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant

 

 

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