51勛圖

SAT is worth its salt 1

Published on
November 1, 2002
Last updated
May 22, 2015

You are right to argue that universities should make allowances for candidates from schools with poor results ("Tackle suspicion that plagues UK admissions", THES , October 11). Admissions systems based on predicted A levels can fail to indicate potential in lower-achieving state applicants. But your dismissal of the Sutton Trust-funded UK trials of the US scholastic aptitude tests (SAT) as a useful addition to this process is premature.

The study, commissioned from the National Foundation for Educational Research, found that the SAT I reasoning test measured a different construct from GCSEs and A levels. It identified 30 students (5 per cent of the sample) in low-attaining schools who scored high enough on the SAT to be considered by a US Ivy League institution, but only one of these scored 3 As at A-level.

A levels have only limited ability to predict degree performance. If we are to achieve an equitable university admissions system, we must develop a means of assessing academic potential beyond A levels.

Tessa Stone
Director, The Sutton Trust

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