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April
9, 2004
April 28 Talk By UC President Emeritus
Atkinson Will Present
Unique Perspective On SAT Exam Overhaul Set For Fall, 2006
By Barry Jagoda
In
2001 the then president of the University of California, Dr.
Richard C. Atkinson, gave a Washington address to the American
Council of Education proposing that colleges and universities
radically change the way they evaluate students applying for
admission. He recommended eliminating the Scholastic Aptitude
Test, known as the SAT and taken by millions of high school
students each year, and replacing it with a new test measuring
what students actually learned in high school. An important
aspect of this proposal was that the new test include an essay
section requiring students to produce a significant writing
sample.
On April 28, Atkinson,
now UC President Emeritus, and also former Chancellor of the
University of California, San Diego, will discuss the history
of college admissions testing and describe the process that
led, in just a few short years, to the wholesale change in the
SAT that will begin nationwide in the fall of 2006. The talk,
to be presented by the UCSD Center for the Humanities at 7:30
p.m. in Mandeville Center Auditorium on the UCSD campus, is
free and open to the public.
Atkinson had long
been a skeptic about the SAT and IQ testing, in general. He
served, for the National Academy of Sciences, as chair of the
Board on Testing and Assessment, which advises the federal government
on these topics. During this tenure, he became immersed in the
research on testing and concluded that the SAT, in wide use
since World War II, was deeply flawed, did a disservice to young
people applying to college, and distorted a student’s
high school education. Thus, his call for a complete change
in how standardized tests are used when judging applicants to
college.
The rest of the story,
which took place mostly during Atkinson’s tenure as President
of the University of California, will be revealed in the Humanities
Center lecture with humorous, and not so funny, experiences
along the path. The occasion offers a rare opportunity for an
inside look at an educational and cultural change from the point
of view of a principal catalyst.
For further information,
please contact the UCSD Center for the Humanities, (858) 534-0999.
Media Contact: Barry
Jagoda, (858) 534-8567
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