Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Another SAT Scandal

Another SAT Scandal May 24 Valerie Strauss of The Washington Post has become the Woodward Bernstein of reporting on SAT cheating scandals. Weve been writing quite a bit about SAT cheating scandals that have occurred in Asia this past year. Well, the pandemic has spread. An SAT scandal has now hit America with a major security breach on the May 2nd administration of the exam. The day prior to the administration of this SAT, a respected education reporter for The Washington Post, Valerie Strauss, as well as FairTest, an organization that is against exams such as the SAT, both received different versions of the SAT that was to be administered the following day. As Strauss articulately reports in her piece in The Washington Post entitled New allegations of an SAT security breach, this time on a U.S. test, The exams were purported to be the tests American students were to take across the United States the following day, on May 2, and possibly by some students in Asia.  It is not known definitively if what was sent was an entire â€Å"live† form of the test, but FairTest, or the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, has since confirmed that many of the questions on the versions we received were on the May 2 test given in the United States. Bob Schaeffer, public education director of FairTest, said that while it is unclear how many students had access to the test beforehand, anyone who used that document to prep for the May 2 test would have had a leg up due to prior knowledge.' Its absolutely  fascinating to us  that Valerie Strauss received the test the day ahead of time. Strauss, as we noted, is an education reporter for The Washington Post. But, more importantly, it should be noted that she has done the vast majority of the reporting on the SAT cheating scandals in Asia. She has led this coverage not just for The Washington Post. She is the news authority on this subject. And, of course, The Washington Post has a reputation for bringing scandals to the publics attention (hello Woodward Bernstein and Watergate!). Nobody seems to be quite sure how these tests got into circulation or how Strauss and FairTest got versions of the SAT, but it does call into question the validity of the administration of the exam. Were curious to see how College Board and ETS respond in the weeks ahead to these allegations. Itll be interesting to see to say the least.

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