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Are Admissions Tests A Barrier to College for Underrepresented Students?

Jun 22, 2025
College entrance exams rank among the world's most scrutinized assessments. Public opinion generally supports standardized testing for admissions, though critics remain vocal about their concerns.

A primary criticism centers on average score disparities across racial and ethnic groups. Like most cognitive assessments, notable differences emerge, with Asian students typically scoring highest, followed by European American, Hispanic, and African American students. Similar patterns appear across socioeconomic levels, with wealthier students outperforming middle-class students, who in turn score higher than those from low-income backgrounds.

These disparities create challenges for universities seeking demographically representative student bodies. Applying uniform minimum scores results in higher admission rates for top-scoring groups. Many consequently view these exams as obstacles to equity, favoring more privileged applicants.



The World Turned Upside Down: College Admissions Tests as Tools for Equality

Selection is Inevitable. Most four-year institutions receive more applications than available spots, with elite universities sometimes attracting ten times more applicants than they can accommodate. Eliminating entrance exams won't change this reality—it merely shifts the selection method.

Other Available Options. While entrance exams won't produce perfectly representative student bodies, evidence suggests they outperform alternatives. This doesn't mean perfection, but they're the least problematic option available.

High school grades represent one alternative already heavily weighted in admissions. Grades offer valuable insights into punctuality, attendance, and sustained motivation. However, relying exclusively on grades would be problematic. Like test scores, grades correlate with income and show identical racial and ethnic patterns. Yet grades escape the scrutiny applied to standardized tests. Being partially subjective, grades are vulnerable to teacher bias, potentially exacerbating rather than eliminating disparities.

Grade weighting for advanced courses creates additional problems. Weighting practices vary between schools, reducing correlation with college performance. Moreover, these schemes favor wealthier students who attend schools offering more advanced courses and are more likely to enroll in them.

Other information sources—portfolios, essays, recommendation letters, extracurricular lists, and awards—prove even more subjective and susceptible to bias. These measures won't eliminate income, cultural, or language differences. Wealthy families possess more resources, time, and connections to secure strong recommendations, hire writing coaches, and strengthen applications.

Gaming the System. Critics question whether expensive test preparation allows wealthy families to purchase higher scores. Companies like Princeton Review charge substantial fees promising significant improvements. However, carefully designed research reveals preparation courses produce minimal impact—roughly 20-25 total SAT points. Most gains stem from format familiarity, easily obtained through free materials. Beyond modest improvements, substantial score increases require months of genuine academic preparation—exactly how merit-based tests should function.

Test creators actually want students familiar with formats so scores better reflect actual knowledge. When everyone accesses preparation materials, advantages from expensive courses diminish. The College Board now provides free practice tests and instructional videos.

Entrance exams' resistance to coaching protects against unqualified wealthy applicants. Other application components are easily manipulated. Grade inflation demonstrates this vulnerability. Parents can pressure teachers for extra credit or seek schools with lenient grading. Test scores resist these pressures.

The wealthy manipulate admissions through other channels—legacy preferences and athletic recruitment in expensive sports like lacrosse and sailing. Operation Varsity Blues illustrated these exams' importance: parents allegedly resorted to illegal measures because standardized tests were the only component they couldn't directly manipulate. Nearly every other aspect was easily influenced.

A Tool for Social Equality. Despite criticism, entrance exams can promote equality by creating barriers for wealthy, unqualified applicants while opening doors for talented students from less privileged backgrounds. Ironically, Harvard adopted the SAT in the 1930s specifically to diversify its student body beyond traditional wealthy recruiting pools.



Don't Shoot the Messenger

College entrance exams don't create societal inequalities—they measure existing ones. These tests don't make wealthier students more prepared; years of prior academic experience do that. Wealthier families invest more in enrichment activities, and their children attend schools offering advanced courses. If tests didn't reflect these preparation differences, they'd be dysfunctional.



Conclusion

Eliminating entrance exams won't erase academic preparedness inequalities or solve university selection problems. These tests aren't perfect, but they're the least problematic available option. Unlike alternatives critics suggest, scores are difficult to manipulate, screened for bias, resistant to expensive preparation programs, and weakly correlated with family income.

Demographic and socioeconomic differences persist year after year. No perfect solution exists for reconciling qualified student admission with social equality goals. However, generations of bright students from disadvantaged backgrounds are grateful for systems allowing them to demonstrate academic promise. For these students, standardized exams are invaluable tools enabling competition with those whose parents afford preparation courses, private schools, tutors, and exclusive activities. Eliminating these exams would harm smart, underrepresented students most.





From Chapter 21 of "In the Know: Debunking 35 Myths About Human Intelligence" by Dr. Russell Warne (2020)