COLLEGE ADMISSIONS TESTS

Download Report

Transcript COLLEGE ADMISSIONS TESTS

COLLEGE ADMISSIONS TESTS
….THE WHAT AND THE WHY
TRUE OR FALSE
Test scores are all that colleges
look at when considering
potential students?
THE PLAN TEST
•
•
•
•
Pre-ACT test
Designed for 9th and 10th grade students
Assesses academics and career interests
Five Sections: English, Math, Reading,
Science, and the Interest Inventory & Needs
Assessment
• Recommended Test Dates: September –
December
THE PLAN TEST (cont’d)
• Test Duration: 1 hour and 55 minutes
• Skills Tested:
Student’s grasp of skills and knowledge and their
ability to apply that knowledge.
• Format/Questions: Multiple Choice
• Study Resources: www.act.org
PRELIMINARY SAT (PSAT/NMSQT)
• Preliminary SAT or National Merit Scholarship
Qualifying Test
• Practice for the SAT Reasoning Test
• Designed 11th grade students*
• Three-Sections: Critical Reading, math, and
writing
• Test Dates: mid-October
PRELIMINARY SAT (PSAT/NMSQT)
(cont’d)
• Test Duration: 2 hours and 10 minutes
• Skills Tested:
Critical Reading Section: extended reasoning,
literal comprehension, and vocabulary in
context
Math: algebra, functions, geometry,
measurement, data analysis, statistics, and
probability.
Writing: grammar, usage, and word choice
PRELIMINARY SAT (PSAT/NMSQT)
(cont’d)
• Format/Questions:
Critical Reading: uses sentence completion
and passage-based readings.
Math: uses multiple choice questions and
student-produced responses
Writing: uses multiple choice questions that
include improving sentences, identifying
sentence errors and improving paragraphs
• Study Resource: www.collegeboard.com
PRELIMINARY SAT (PSAT/NMSQT)
(cont’d)
• Scoring Information: The PSAT uses a negative
scoring system in which a student loses a
fraction of a point for each incorrect answer.
(Hint: Students must learn to recognize the
questions they should skip in preparation for
the PSAT).
THE ACT ASSESSMENT
• “American College Test”
• College entrance examination that measures
students’ knowledge and skills in English,
math, reading, and science reasoning, and the
application of these skills to future academic
tasks.
• Most colleges will use either the ACT or SAT
scores for admissions purposes.
THE ACT ASSESSMENT (cont’d)
• The writing test on the ACT is optional and
dependant upon individual college
requirements
• Test Duration: 2 hours and 55 minutes
• Test Dates: The ACT is given several times
throughout the traditional school year.
THE ACT ASSESSMENT (cont’d)
• Skills Tested:
English: punctuation, grammar, usage,
sentence structure, and rhetorical skills
including strategy, organization, and style.
Math: measures math skills usually acquired
by the end of the 11th grade year. Students
will need knowledge of basic formulas and
computational skills.
THE ACT ASSESSMENT (cont’d)
• Skills Tested
Reading: Requires students to show understanding
of both direct and implied meaning.
Science: This test assumes that students are in the
process of taking three years or more of core
science classes. These classes should include earth
science and/or physical science and or biology.
Writing (optional): Requires students to define an
issue and describe two points of views on that issue.
THE ACT ASSESSMENT (cont’d)
• Format/Questions: With the exception of the
writing test, multiple choice questions are
used in all the sections.
• Study Resources: www.act.org
• Additional Information: Unlike the SAT, the
ACT does not use negative scoring.
• Students may use certain types of calculators
on the mathematics section, but not on the
science section.
THE SAT REASONING TEST
• “The Scholastic Aptitude Test”
• The SAT is widely used in college admission to
assess a student’s readiness for and potential
for success in college.
• This test measures a students’ abilities in
critical reading, mathematics, and writing.
• Test Duration: 3 hours and 45 minutes
• Test Dates: The SAT test is offered several
times throughout the school year.
THE SAT REASONING TEST (cont’d)
• Skills Tested:
Critical Reading: This section measures a
student’s ability to identify genres, relationships
among parts of a text, cause and effect, rhetorical
devices, and comparative arguments.
*Reading passages are taken from different fields
including the natural sciences, the humanities,
the social sciences, and literary fiction.
THE SAT REASONING TEST (cont’d)
Skills Tested:
Math: This section measures a student’s
ability in numbers and operations; Algebra I, II,
and functions; geometry, and statistics,
probability, and data analysis.
Writing: This section is multiple choice and it
measures a student’s ability to recognize
errors, improve sentences, and improve
paragraphs within a written context.
THE SAT REASONING TEST (cont’d)
• Essay: This section measures a student’s ability
to develop and support a position on a topic.
• Format/Questions:
Critical Reading: This sections includes sentence
completions and multiple-choice items based on
the reading passage.
Math: Includes multiple-choice and student
produced responses.
Writing: This section requires students to answer
multiple-choice questions and write an essay.
THE SAT REASONING TEST
Study Resources: www.college board.org
Scoring Information: Like the PSAT the SAT uses
a negative scoring system.