by Maria Colombo
The University of Tennessee System (UT) announced recently that it has ended its test-optional admissions policy.
The new policy requires first-year applicants to submit an ACT or SAT score in order to be considered for the Fall 2023 semester.
Melissa Tindell, executive director of communications at the UT system, told Campus Reform that standardized test scores are part of a “holistic” admissions process.
“Standardized test scores, while important, only represent one component of the holistic admissions processes,” Tindell stated.
The test-optional policy was launched in July 2020 to “help prospective students” when the testing centers were closed during COVID-19.
A January 2022 report to the UT Board of Trustees, however, found that standardized testing is beneficial to the system’s admission process.
However, data on the pilot program submitted by four UT campuses in January proved that
The research found that “adding standardized test scored to high school GPA can have the important effect of statistical moderation” that “offset[s] differences in grading across high schools.”
It also found that using standardized test scores in addition to GPA gave a better indicator of a student’s academic ability.
“Looking across student subgroups, the joint use of ACT Composite scores and high school GPA resulted in greater prediction accuracy than when either predictor was used alone,” the report concludes.
The report also acknowledged that a majority of students chose to submit standardized test scores despite it being optional.
UT System President Randy Boyd said in a statement that the test-optional pilot was an “exception we made to our admissions practices for the last two years.”
The program was originally put in place for one year.
However, UT announced last May that the program would continue for “up to five more years,” The Chronicle of Higher Education reports. The program was required to undergo an “annual evaluation” to determine if it should be reformed or discontinued.
Other universities are reversing their test-optional policies.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology reinstated its standardized testing requirement in March for the class of 2027.
In contrast, Campus Reform reported that Harvard University extended its test-optional policy through 2026.
– – –
Maria Colombo is an incoming 1L at the University of North Carolina School of Law. She graduated from the University of Florida in 2022 with a bachelor’s degree in economics.
Photo “University of Tennessee” by JPellgen CC2.0NC
I personally score terribly on my SAT/ACT. However, like many others, I started out at the local Community College. It was there that I applied myself, and made the appropriate grades to get into a major university; in which there, I flourished and made the Dean’s list in the Honor Roll. Tennessee now has a program for community college learning, Tennessee Promise. Save the money, live with the parents, take full advantage, and then transfer. Pretty simply. An 18 year old has no idea what they are getting into by going into debt to attend a Frat Party.
This means that the dumbed down testing will once again be used.