https://mitadmissions.org/blogs/entry/we-are-reinstating-our-sat-act-requirement-for-future-admissions-cycles/
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MIT staff blogger Dean Stu Schmill '86
We are reinstating our SAT/ACT requirement for future admissions
cycles by Stu Schmill '86
in order to help us continue to build a diverse and talented MIT
March 28, 2022
* in Announcements
At MIT Admissions, our mission is to recruit, select, and enroll a
diverse and talented group of students who are a good match for MIT's
unique education and culture. Everything we do in our process is
grounded by our goal to find and admit students who will succeed at
MIT and serve the world afterward.
After careful consideration, we have decided to reinstate our SAT/ACT
requirement for future admissions cycles. Our research shows
standardized tests help us better assess the academic preparedness of
all applicants, and also help us identify socioeconomically
disadvantaged students who lack access to advanced coursework or
other enrichment opportunities that would otherwise demonstrate their
readiness for MIT. We believe a requirement is more equitable and
transparent than a test-optional policy. In the post below -- and in
a separate conversation with MIT News today -- I explain more01 In
addition to the main text of the post, if you see any text
highlighted in transparent red, you can hover over it on desktop (or
tap, on mobile) to see a related annotation on the right hand side of
the post (or inline, on mobile; note that the desktop/mobile UI is
triggered by the width of your browser). The annotations are
numbered, and repeated as endnotes at the bottom of the blog. We use
this feature to add additional commentary, evidence, and background
information throughout the post, in case readers want to learn more
than we could reasonably fit into the main body of text while still
keeping it comprehensible. about how we think this decision helps us
advance our mission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
When we initially suspended our testing requirement due to the
disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, I wrote:
This was not a decision we made lightly. Our reliance on these
tests is outcome-driven and applicant-oriented: we don't value
scores for their own sake, but only to the extent that they help
us make better decisions for our students, which they do. We
regularly research the outcomes of MIT students and our own
admissions criteria to ensure we make good decisions for the
right reasons, and we consistently find that considering
performance on the SAT/ACT, particularly the math section,
substantially improves the predictive validity of our decisions
with respect to subsequent student success at the Institute.
Within our office, we have a dedicated research and analysis team
that continuously studies our processes, outcomes, and criteria to
make sure we remain mission-driven and student-centered. During the
pandemic, we redoubled our efforts to understand how we can best
evaluate academic readiness for all students, particularly those most
impacted by its attendant disruptions. To briefly summarize a great
deal of careful research:
* our ability to accurately predict student academic success at MIT
02 Our research shows this predictive validity holds even when
you control for socioeconomic factors that correlate with
testing. It also shows that good grades in high school do not
themselves necessarily translate to academic success at MIT if
you cannot account for testing. Of course, we can never be
fully certain how any given applicant will do: we're
predicting the development of people, not the movement of
planets, and people always surprise you. However, our research
does help us establish bands of confidence that hold true in
the aggregate, while allowing us, as admissions officers, to
exercise individual contextual discretion in each case. The word
'significantly' in this bullet point is accurate both
statistically and idiomatically. is significantly improved by
considering standardized testing -- especially in mathematics --
alongside other factors
* some standardized exams besides the SAT/ACT can help us evaluate
readiness, but access to these other exams is generally more
socioeconomically restricted03 Examples of these other exams
include the AP/IB exams, international curricula like the IGCSEs,
or the mathematical olympiads. However, access to these
examinations generally depend on what is offered at your high
school, and there are immense disparities between
schools in this regard, and even
within schools for certain students. relative to the SAT/ACT
* as a result, not having SATs/ACT scores to consider tends to
raise socioeconomic barriers to demonstrating readiness for our
education,04 Although our analysis is specific to MIT, our
findings directionally align with a major study conducted by the University
of California's Standardized Testing Task Force, which found
that including SAT/ACT scores predicted undergraduate performance
better than grades alone, and also helped admissions officers
identify well-prepared students from less-advantaged backgrounds.
It is also consistent with independent research compiled
by education researcher Susan Dynarski that shows
standardized testing can be an effective way to identify talented
disadvantaged students who would otherwise go unrecognized. Of
course, there may be institutions for whom this research does not
hold true, but the findings are very robust for MIT, and have
been for many, many years. relative to having them, given these
other inequalities
Our research can't explain why these tests are so predictive of
academic preparedness for MIT, but we believe it is likely related to
the centrality of mathematics -- and mathematics examinations -- in our
education. All MIT students, regardless of intended major, must pass
two semesters of calculus, plus two semesters of calculus-based
physics, as part of our General Institute Requirements.05 The GIRs
are both a defining strength of the MIT education, and also the
functional constraint on access to it. Because all MIT
undergraduates, no matter their major, must pass challenging classes
in calculus, physics, biology, and chemistry -- as well as a rigorous
humanistic and communication requirement -- we believe we can only
responsibly admit students who are prepared to do all of that work,
across all of those fields, at their time of entry to MIT. It is
perhaps worth noting that the GIRs are also the most basic point of
entry in each of these fields: MIT does not offer any remedial math
classes 'below' the level of single-variable calculus, for example, or
physics courses 'below' classical mechanics, so students have to be ready to
perform at that level and pace when they arrive. The substance and
pace of these courses are both very demanding, and they culminate in
long, challenging final exams that students must pass06 In addition
to final exams in the GIRs, first-year students also usually take
several other exams. Most students also must take a separate math
diagnostic test for physics placement as soon as they arrive on
campus, and placement out of MIT classes is mostly granted through
our Advanced
Standing Exams, rather than by AP or transfer credit. As a member
of our faculty once observed to me, "the first year at MIT is often a
series of high-stakes math tests." Given this, it is perhaps not
surprising that the SAT/ACT are predictive (indeed, it would be more
surprising if they weren't). to proceed with their education.07 The
vast majority of MIT students will then go on to take many additional
quantitative and analytical courses within their program of study,
even if they are not majoring in science or engineering. For example,
an economics degree at MIT
requires at least one course in econometrics, and a philosophy degree at MIT usually entails
courses in set theory, modal logic, and/or infinities and paradox).
To a degree unlike almost any other institution, MIT is a place where
every student will have to do a lot of math (and
math tests). In other words, there is no path through MIT that does
not rest on a rigorous foundation in mathematics, and we need to be
sure our students are ready for that as soon as they arrive.08 A
reader might reasonably ask: well, can't MIT do more to bring
students up to speed? Why are you most focused on students who you
think can already do well, and not those who could, if
they had more help? To be clear, everyone will
find MIT a challenge, no matter how well-prepared. And MIT
does provide support for its students through its excellent
tutoring programs, affinity
networks, support services,
alternative curricula, summer programs, and so on. However, our
research shows there is a degree of preparation below which a
student, even with those resources, is unlikely to be able
to succeed. We feel it is our responsibility to make those difficult
calls, and only admit a student to MIT if they are ready to undertake
its education at this point in their educational development.
Meanwhile, we continue to collaborate with our
partners in K-12 education to try and help interrupt persistent,
intergenerational inequality where and how we can.
To be clear, performance on standardized tests is not the central
focus of our holistic admissions process. We do not prefer people
with perfect scores; indeed, despite what some people infer from our
statistics, we do not consider an applicant's scores at all beyond
the point where preparedness has been established as part of a
multifactor analysis. Nor are strong scores themselves sufficient:
our research shows students also need to do well in high school and
have a strong match for MIT, including the resilience to rebound from
its challenges, and the initiative to make use of its resources.
That's why we don't select students solely on how well they score on
the tests, but only consider scores to the extent they help us feel
more confident about an applicant's preparedness09 It is worth
noting that since MIT opened in 1865, and until our public-health
driven suspension in 2020, MIT has required some kind of entrance
exam to demonstrate mastery of the material required to succeed in
our education. As our blogger CJ has documented, at the founding, applicants
were required to show competence in "arithmetic, algebra, geometry,
English grammar, geography, and the rudiments of French" on an
entrance examination designed and administered by the Institute.
These exams allow applicants to show their ability to succeed at MIT
regardless of what was available at the high school they may have
attended, and eventually transitioned to similar exams offered by the
College Board by the 1940s, which evolved over time into the simpler
set of tests we have today. So there is a long history of MIT
tailoring its admissions requirements to pragmatic assessments of
what is required to do well at the Institute. to not just to survive,
but thrive, at MIT.
At the same time, standardized tests also help us identify
academically prepared, socioeconomically disadvantaged students who
could not otherwise demonstrate readiness10 This may seem like a
counterintuitive claim to some, given the widespread understanding
that performance on the SAT/ACT is correlated with socioeconomic
status. Research indeed shows some correlation, but unfortunately, research also
shows correlations hold for just about every other
factor admissions officers can consider, including essays, grades, access to advanced coursework (as
well as
opportunities to actually take notionally available coursework),
and letters of recommendations, among others.
Meanwhile, research has shown widespread
testing can identify subaltern students who would be missed
by these other measures. Of course, this area of research is
complex and contested, but the main point is that for every aspect of
every application, we always have to adjust for context: as
one of the papers I linked above notes, "college admission protocols
should attend to how social class is...encoded in non-numerical
components of applications." Meanwhile, the predictive validity of
these tests for MIT, coupled with their ability to identify (some)
students who would not otherwise be 'picked up' by other indicators,
means that we are able to use them to help diversify our class more
than if we did not consider them. because they do not attend schools
that offer advanced coursework, cannot afford expensive enrichment
opportunities, cannot expect lengthy letters of recommendation from
their overburdened teachers, or are otherwise hampered by educational
inequalities.11 In general, we think it is important that the MIT
education does not simply and unthinkingly reproduce an educational
elite who have already had ample access to resources. In our process,
we do not give preference to legacies, nor weight to demonstrated
interest, nor an advantage to those who apply through our
(non-binding and non-restrictive) Early Action process, nor other
things that subtly correlate with socioeconomic advantage but are
unrelated to a student's ability to do well at MIT. And when we
review applications, we always strive to evaluate each student's
accomplishments in context: we don't care as much about what a
student has done as what they have done relative to what might
have been expected, given their resources. According to research published in the New York Times a
few years ago, there is more economic diversity and intergenerational
mobility at MIT than at comparable institutions (although not quite
as much as at some public institutions that deserve ample credit and
recognition for their work); nearly 20 percent of our students are
the first-generation in their family to attend college, as I was. We
of course have room to do better, and we think the tests will help us
continue to improve. By using the tests as a tool12 We know they are
imperfect tools, of course. Tests can't measure everything that is
important about an applicant's creativity, curiosity, or drive. But
because all of our tools are imperfect, we have to account for all of
their imperfections in our process. This is what makes admissions
something a skilled human does, and not something amenable to a
simple algorithm crunching numbers. Given all these imperfections,
might we someday have better tools at our disposal? I hope so. I have
supported reform initiatives such as the Mastery Transcript,
performance assessments, and schoolhouse.world certifications.
For many years, we have allowed students to submit creative portfolios -- including
our Maker Portfolio for technical creativity -- to demonstrate unique
interests and aptitudes not necessarily captured in their grades and
scores. However, these alternative assessments are not yet widely
available to students across the socioeconomic spectrum (relative to
the SAT/ACT), and we do not yet have the research that would allow us
to substitute them for the tests as a predictor of success at MIT
even if they were. We will continue our advocacy and research in
these areas, but for now, we find we still need to rely on
conventional indicators like grades and scores, at least to some
degree. in the service of our mission, we have helped improve the
diversity of our undergraduate population13 What it means to
"improve diversity" is a complex question. As we say in our diversity statement: "How much diversity is necessary
to achieve our goals? Every student should feel that 'there are
people like me here' and 'there are people different from me here.'
No student should feel isolated; all students should come into
contact with members of other groups and experience them as
colleagues with valuable ideas and insights." For our purposes here,
by "improving diversity" we mean we work to improve the recruitment
and enrollment of well-matched and academically prepared students
from a range of under-represented populations, including students of
color, low-income students, and students who will be the first
generation in their family to go to college.. We also value the
diversity contributed by our many 'New Americans': a majority of MIT
students are either immigrants themselves, or the child of at least
one immigrant parent, and we believe their experiences and perspectives enhance MIT as
well. while student academic outcomes at MIT have gotten better,
14 For example, rising graduation rates
across all demographic groups, and fewer students receiving fifth week
flags or otherwise subjected to
academic review, just in terms of things we can straightforwardly
measure. too; our strategic and purposeful use of testing has been
crucial to doing both simultaneously.15 In the past, we have
publicly described this simultaneity -- more diverse, and
doing better -- as there being no
necessary tradeoff between diversity and merit, as some
unfortunately still seem to believe. Of course, in contemporary
discussions of educational equity, the entire concept of "merit" --
which appears as a keyword in our mission statement -- has been
critiqued as merely laundering intergenerational privilege. However,
what we mean by "merit" in this context is something like:
"someone who we think will do very well at MIT, and in the world
afterward, based on what they have done with their opportunities,
relative to what we would have expected given those
resources." In other words, it is defined pragmatically and
contextually for the specific needs of, and goals for, an MIT
education, and is not intended to pass universal judgment of who
"deserves" or has "earned" our education. Meanwhile, our research
suggests the strategic use of testing can help us continue to improve
both the diversity of our class and its collective success at MIT.
The pandemic has only made this more clear, because classroom work
and assessment have been just as disrupted as access to the tests, if
not more so, and for longer periods of time, disproportionately
affecting the most socioeconomically disadvantaged students. We know
that the pandemic's effects on grades and courses will linger for
years, but the tests can give students a more recent opportunity to
show that they have made up lost ground.
Like all of you, we had hoped that, by now, the pandemic would be
behind us. It is not, nor is it clear if or when it will be. However,
the availability of vaccines for adolescents16 Prospective MIT
students should note that all faculty, staff, and enrolled students
must be up to date with their Covid-19 vaccines, or have received an
exemption from vaccination, in order to work, study, and/or live on
campus. "Up to date" in this context means a person has received all
recommended Covid-19 vaccines. Additionally, Covid-19 vaccine
boosters are required of all eligible MIT employees, faculty, and
enrolled students, as well as anyone else who studies, works, or
lives on MIT's campus or who regularly accesses MIT facilities. For
more on MIT's vaccination policies, click here. has reduced the health risks
of in-person educational activities, while the expansion of the free
in-school SAT,17 Which is how a majority of students in the United
States now take the SAT. and the forthcoming Digital SAT, have
increased opportunities to take the tests. Given the crucial role
these tests play in our process, we have -- after careful
consideration within our office, and with the unanimous support of
our student-faculty advisory committee -- decided to reinstate our SAT
/ACT requirement for the foreseeable future.18 We know that this is
cutting against the recent trend toward test-optional policies. However, for reasons I've
explained above, the tests greatly help us in our efforts to enroll a
diverse and talented class. I say "for the foreseeable future"
because we believe this policy is the best way for us to meet our
mission given the facts on the ground as they are now, but also to
acknowledge -- as the pandemic has repeatedly taught us -- that
sometimes those facts change. We will continue to research all of our
practices and outcomes to make sure we remain centered on our
mission, and not the tests themselves. For example, a few years ago
we made the decision to stop considering the SAT Subject
tests in our process. As I wrote at the time, we did this because
our research showed the marginal additional benefit of the subject
tests (in terms of predicting academic outcomes) was no longer worth
the costs of access in terms of recruiting and enrolling our desired
class (as long as we could still consider the SAT/ACT), because
exogenous patterns of test-taking had changed. This hopefully helps
explain how we think about our research informing our practice,
guided by our values.
We are reinstating our requirement, rather than adopting a more
flexible policy, to be transparent and equitable in our expectations.
Our concern is that, without the compelling clarity of a requirement,
some well-prepared applicants won't take the tests, and we won't have
enough information to be confident in their academic readiness19
Again, our research suggests this is most true for our most
disadvantaged applicants, whose other educational opportunities have
been most disrupted by the effects of the pandemic. when they apply.
We believe it will be more equitable20 By requiring everyone submit
the tests, we reduce the socioeconomic advantage of students who have
access to better advising about strategic score disclosure, while
ensuring that students with less access to such advising are not left
anxiously in the dark, wondering what they should do. This dynamic is
why, when we stopped considering the SAT Subject Tests, we did
not move to a test-optional policy, but instead adopted what is
sometimes called a "test-free" policy, where we do not solicit them
from applicants, and proactively remove them from view when
self-reported. if we require all applicants who take the tests to
disclose their scores.
So, if you are applying to MIT in the future, we will normally expect
you to submit an SAT or ACT score. If you are unable to take the
tests because of a disaster or disruption, because the SAT/ACTs are
(still) unavailable or unsafe to take21 In addition to disruptions
caused by natural disasters, political instability, and military
conflicts, we know the pandemic continues, and not everyone around
the world has been able to be vaccinated yet, or is able to mount an
adequate immune response. Please do not endanger yourself or your
family to sit for these exams. If you have to have to ask
yourself whether or not you are in danger, exercise the precautionary
principle and assume the answer is yes. in your region, or for
another exceptional reason, we will give you space on the application
to explain your circumstances, and we will still grant you a full and
fair review. In such cases, we will not make any negative
presumptions regarding your academic readiness based solely on the
absence of SAT/ACT scores, but will instead draw upon the lessons we
have learned during the pandemic to make the best, most informed
decision we can by rigorously assessing other academic aspects of
your application.22 Based on our research from the pandemic, the
most important components to demonstrate academic readiness in the
absence of SAT/ACT scores would be other standardized exams, such as
the AP/IB/AICE exams in the United States, or (inter)national
examinations such as the IGCSE, CAPE, WASSCE, KCSE, French
Baccalaureate, Abitur,
International Science Olympiads, and so on abroad.
I understand that this announcement may dismay some readers for whom
the tests can be a source of stress. As someone whose daughters went
through the college admissions process over the last few years, I saw
firsthand23 It was difficult enough for them, and they had a Dean of
Admissions for a dad! the anxiety they can cause.24 Not only a
stress but a burden -- another thing to study for, and schedule, and
do. We try to remove barriers from applicants wherever we can, and
think of the tests as a bridge for reasons I described above, but of
course,
infrastructures are relational: a bridge functions as a
barrier if you can't cross it. For that reason, we continue to work
with the College Board, Khan Academy's tutoring team, and other
agencies and institutions to reduce burdens, and pave paths, as much
as possible from our position. I've heard from many applicants (and
their parents) that requiring the tests can make it feel like we only
care about a number, and not the person behind it. I also understand
that our emphasis on academic preparedness in this post might make an
applicant who does not score well feel inadequate, or like we think
less of them as a student or a person.
To those of you who feel this way I say: you are not your test
scores, and for that matter, you are also not your MIT application,
either. You are infinitely more than either of these narrow
constructs could ever capture. When we talk about evaluating academic
readiness for MIT, that doesn't mean we are measuring your academic
potential, or intrinsic worth as a human. It only means that we are
confident you, at this specific moment in your educational
trajectory, can do well in the kind of hard math and science tests
demanded by our unusual education. Every year, we turn down25
Sometimes we do not admit students because we are concerned about
their academic preparation, or match for MIT; given the strength of
our applicant pool, though, it is more often the case we think they
can do the work, but we simply don't have the space to admit
all the well-qualified and well-matched students who apply. many
outstanding applicants -- people we think are truly awesome -- who go
on to thrive elsewhere. Remember: your MIT decision is never about us
passing judgment on you as a person, just about us contingently
selecting a particular team of people, at a particular point in time,
to take on the challenge of MIT, together.
We are announcing this decision now to give the prospective Class of
2027 (and beyond) time to prepare for their exams and otherwise make
their college application plans. In the meantime, we will continue to
welcome the newly admitted Class of 2026 -- especially at our first
in-person Campus Preview Weekend since 2019 next week -- and wish all
of you a healthy and happy 2022.
Post Tagged
* #access
* #act
* #diversity
* #equity
* #process
* #SAT
* #tests
1. In addition to the main text of the post, if you see any text
highlighted in transparent red, you can hover over it on desktop
(or tap, on mobile) to see a related annotation on the right hand
side of the post (or inline, on mobile; note that the desktop/
mobile UI is triggered by the width of your browser). The
annotations are numbered, and repeated as endnotes at the bottom
of the blog. We use this feature to add additional commentary,
evidence, and background information throughout the post, in case
readers want to learn more than we could reasonably fit into the
main body of text while still keeping it comprehensible. back to
text |
2. Our research shows this predictive validity holds even when you
control for socioeconomic factors that correlate with testing. It
also shows that good grades in high school do not themselves
necessarily translate to academic success at MIT if you cannot
account for testing. Of course, we can never be fully certain how
any given applicant will do: we're predicting the development of
people, not the movement of planets, and people always surprise
you. However, our research does help us establish bands of
confidence that hold true in the aggregate, while allowing us, as
admissions officers, to exercise individual contextual discretion
in each case. The word 'significantly' in this bullet point is
accurate both statistically and idiomatically. back to text |
3. Examples of these other exams include the AP/IB exams,
international curricula like the IGCSEs, or the mathematical
olympiads. However, access to these examinations generally depend
on what is offered at your high school, and there are immense
disparities between schools in this regard, and even within
schools for certain students. back to text |
4. Although our analysis is specific to MIT, our findings
directionally align with a major study conducted by the
University of California's Standardized Testing Task Force, which
found that including SAT/ACT scores predicted undergraduate
performance better than grades alone, and also helped admissions
officers identify well-prepared students from less-advantaged
backgrounds. It is also consistent with independent research
compiled by education researcher Susan Dynarski that shows
standardized testing can be an effective way to identify talented
disadvantaged students who would otherwise go unrecognized. Of
course, there may be institutions for whom this research does not
hold true, but the findings are very robust for MIT, and have
been for many, many years. back to text |
5. The GIRs are both a defining strength of the MIT education, and
also the functional constraint on access to it. Because all MIT
undergraduates, no matter their major, must pass challenging
classes in calculus, physics, biology, and chemistry -- as well as
a rigorous humanistic and communication requirement -- we believe
we can only responsibly admit students who are prepared to do all
of that work, across all of those fields, at their time of entry
to MIT. It is perhaps worth noting that the GIRs are also the
most basic point of entry in each of these fields: MIT does not
offer any remedial math classes 'below' the level of
single-variable calculus, for example, or physics courses 'below'
classical mechanics, so students have to be ready to perform at
that level and pace when they arrive. back to text |
6. In addition to final exams in the GIRs, first-year students also
usually take several other exams. Most students also must take a
separate math diagnostic test for physics placement as soon as
they arrive on campus, and placement out of MIT classes is mostly
granted through our Advanced Standing Exams, rather than by AP or
transfer credit. As a member of our faculty once observed to me,
"the first year at MIT is often a series of high-stakes math
tests." Given this, it is perhaps not surprising that the SAT/ACT
are predictive (indeed, it would be more surprising if they
weren't). back to text |
7. The vast majority of MIT students will then go on to take many
additional quantitative and analytical courses within their
program of study, even if they are not majoring in science or
engineering. For example, an economics degree at MIT requires at
least one course in econometrics, and a philosophy degree at MIT
usually entails courses in set theory, modal logic, and/or
infinities and paradox). To a degree unlike almost any other
institution, MIT is a place where every student will have to do a
lot of math (and math tests). back to text |
8. A reader might reasonably ask: well, can't MIT do more to bring
students up to speed? Why are you most focused on students who
you think can already do well, and not those who could, if they
had more help? To be clear, everyone will find MIT a challenge,
no matter how well-prepared. And MIT does provide support for its
students through its excellent tutoring programs, affinity
networks, support services, alternative curricula, summer
programs, and so on. However, our research shows there is a
degree of preparation below which a student, even with those
resources, is unlikely to be able to succeed. We feel it is our
responsibility to make those difficult calls, and only admit a
student to MIT if they are ready to undertake its education at
this point in their educational development. Meanwhile, we
continue to collaborate with our partners in K-12 education to
try and help interrupt persistent, intergenerational inequality
where and how we can. back to text |
9. It is worth noting that since MIT opened in 1865, and until our
public-health driven suspension in 2020, MIT has required some
kind of entrance exam to demonstrate mastery of the material
required to succeed in our education. As our blogger CJ has
documented, at the founding, applicants were required to show
competence in "arithmetic, algebra, geometry, English grammar,
geography, and the rudiments of French" on an entrance
examination designed and administered by the Institute. These
exams allow applicants to show their ability to succeed at MIT
regardless of what was available at the high school they may have
attended, and eventually transitioned to similar exams offered by
the College Board by the 1940s, which evolved over time into the
simpler set of tests we have today. So there is a long history of
MIT tailoring its admissions requirements to pragmatic
assessments of what is required to do well at the Institute.
back to text |
10. This may seem like a counterintuitive claim to some, given the
widespread understanding that performance on the SAT/ACT is
correlated with socioeconomic status. Research indeed shows some
correlation, but unfortunately, research also shows correlations
hold for just about every other factor admissions officers can
consider, including essays, grades, access to advanced coursework
(as well as opportunities to actually take notionally available
coursework), and letters of recommendations, among others.
Meanwhile, research has shown widespread testing can identify
subaltern students who would be missed by these other measures.
Of course, this area of research is complex and contested, but
the main point is that for every aspect of every application, we
always have to adjust for context: as one of the papers I linked
above notes, "college admission protocols should attend to how
social class is...encoded in non-numerical components of
applications." Meanwhile, the predictive validity of these tests
for MIT, coupled with their ability to identify (some) students
who would not otherwise be 'picked up' by other indicators, means
that we are able to use them to help diversify our class more
than if we did not consider them. back to text |
11. In general, we think it is important that the MIT education does
not simply and unthinkingly reproduce an educational elite who
have already had ample access to resources. In our process, we do
not give preference to legacies, nor weight to demonstrated
interest, nor an advantage to those who apply through our
(non-binding and non-restrictive) Early Action process, nor other
things that subtly correlate with socioeconomic advantage but are
unrelated to a student's ability to do well at MIT. And when we
review applications, we always strive to evaluate each student's
accomplishments in context: we don't care as much about what a
student has done as what they have done relative to what might
have been expected, given their resources. According to research
published in the New York Times a few years ago, there is more
economic diversity and intergenerational mobility at MIT than at
comparable institutions (although not quite as much as at some
public institutions that deserve ample credit and recognition for
their work); nearly 20 percent of our students are the
first-generation in their family to attend college, as I was. We
of course have room to do better, and we think the tests will
help us continue to improve. back to text |
12. We know they are imperfect tools, of course. Tests can't measure
everything that is important about an applicant's creativity,
curiosity, or drive. But because all of our tools are imperfect,
we have to account for all of their imperfections in our process.
This is what makes admissions something a skilled human does, and
not something amenable to a simple algorithm crunching numbers.
Given all these imperfections, might we someday have better tools
at our disposal? I hope so. I have supported reform initiatives
such as the Mastery Transcript, performance assessments, and
schoolhouse.world certifications. For many years, we have allowed
students to submit creative portfolios -- including our Maker
Portfolio for technical creativity -- to demonstrate unique
interests and aptitudes not necessarily captured in their grades
and scores. However, these alternative assessments are not yet
widely available to students across the socioeconomic spectrum
(relative to the SAT/ACT), and we do not yet have the research
that would allow us to substitute them for the tests as a
predictor of success at MIT even if they were. We will continue
our advocacy and research in these areas, but for now, we find we
still need to rely on conventional indicators like grades and
scores, at least to some degree. back to text |
13. What it means to "improve diversity" is a complex question. As we
say in our diversity statement: "How much diversity is necessary
to achieve our goals? Every student should feel that 'there are
people like me here' and 'there are people different from me
here.' No student should feel isolated; all students should come
into contact with members of other groups and experience them as
colleagues with valuable ideas and insights." For our purposes
here, by "improving diversity" we mean we work to improve the
recruitment and enrollment of well-matched and academically
prepared students from a range of under-represented populations,
including students of color, low-income students, and students
who will be the first generation in their family to go to
college.. We also value the diversity contributed by our many
'New Americans': a majority of MIT students are either immigrants
themselves, or the child of at least one immigrant parent, and we
believe their experiences and perspectives enhance MIT as well.
back to text |
14. For example, rising graduation rates across all demographic
groups, and fewer students receiving fifth week flags or
otherwise subjected to academic review, just in terms of things
we can straightforwardly measure. back to text |
15. In the past, we have publicly described this simultaneity -- more
diverse, and doing better -- as there being no necessary tradeoff
between diversity and merit, as some unfortunately still seem to
believe. Of course, in contemporary discussions of educational
equity, the entire concept of "merit" -- which appears as a
keyword in our mission statement -- has been critiqued as merely
laundering intergenerational privilege. However, what we mean by
"merit" in this context is something like: "someone who we think
will do very well at MIT, and in the world afterward, based on
what they have done with their opportunities, relative to what we
would have expected given those resources." In other words, it is
defined pragmatically and contextually for the specific needs of,
and goals for, an MIT education, and is not intended to pass
universal judgment of who "deserves" or has "earned" our
education. Meanwhile, our research suggests the strategic use of
testing can help us continue to improve both the diversity of our
class and its collective success at MIT. The pandemic has only
made this more clear, because classroom work and assessment have
been just as disrupted as access to the tests, if not more so,
and for longer periods of time, disproportionately affecting the
most socioeconomically disadvantaged students. We know that the
pandemic's effects on grades and courses will linger for years,
but the tests can give students a more recent opportunity to show
that they have made up lost ground. back to text |
16. Prospective MIT students should note that all faculty, staff, and
enrolled students must be up to date with their Covid-19
vaccines, or have received an exemption from vaccination, in
order to work, study, and/or live on campus. "Up to date" in this
context means a person has received all recommended Covid-19
vaccines. Additionally, Covid-19 vaccine boosters are required of
all eligible MIT employees, faculty, and enrolled students, as
well as anyone else who studies, works, or lives on MIT's campus
or who regularly accesses MIT facilities. For more on MIT's
vaccination policies, click here. back to text |
17. Which is how a majority of students in the United States now take
the SAT. back to text |
18. We know that this is cutting against the recent trend toward
test-optional policies. However, for reasons I've explained
above, the tests greatly help us in our efforts to enroll a
diverse and talented class. I say "for the foreseeable future"
because we believe this policy is the best way for us to meet our
mission given the facts on the ground as they are now, but also
to acknowledge -- as the pandemic has repeatedly taught us --
that sometimes those facts change. We will continue to research
all of our practices and outcomes to make sure we remain centered
on our mission, and not the tests themselves. For example, a few
years ago we made the decision to stop considering the SAT
Subject tests in our process. As I wrote at the time, we did this
because our research showed the marginal additional benefit of
the subject tests (in terms of predicting academic outcomes) was
no longer worth the costs of access in terms of recruiting and
enrolling our desired class (as long as we could still consider
the SAT/ACT), because exogenous patterns of test-taking had
changed. This hopefully helps explain how we think about our
research informing our practice, guided by our values. back to
text |
19. Again, our research suggests this is most true for our most
disadvantaged applicants, whose other educational opportunities
have been most disrupted by the effects of the pandemic. back to
text |
20. By requiring everyone submit the tests, we reduce the
socioeconomic advantage of students who have access to better
advising about strategic score disclosure, while ensuring that
students with less access to such advising are not left anxiously
in the dark, wondering what they should do. This dynamic is why,
when we stopped considering the SAT Subject Tests, we did not
move to a test-optional policy, but instead adopted what is
sometimes called a "test-free" policy, where we do not solicit
them from applicants, and proactively remove them from view when
self-reported. back to text |
21. In addition to disruptions caused by natural disasters, political
instability, and military conflicts, we know the pandemic
continues, and not everyone around the world has been able to be
vaccinated yet, or is able to mount an adequate immune response.
Please do not endanger yourself or your family to sit for these
exams. If you have to have to ask yourself whether or not you are
in danger, exercise the precautionary principle and assume the
answer is yes. back to text |
22. Based on our research from the pandemic, the most important
components to demonstrate academic readiness in the absence of
SAT/ACT scores would be other standardized exams, such as the AP/
IB/AICE exams in the United States, or (inter)national
examinations such as the IGCSE, CAPE, WASSCE, KCSE, French
Baccalaureate, Abitur, International Science Olympiads, and so on
abroad. back to text |
23. It was difficult enough for them, and they had a Dean of
Admissions for a dad! back to text |
24. Not only a stress but a burden -- another thing to study for, and
schedule, and do. We try to remove barriers from applicants
wherever we can, and think of the tests as a bridge for reasons I
described above, but of course, infrastructures are relational: a
bridge functions as a barrier if you can't cross it. For that
reason, we continue to work with the College Board, Khan
Academy's tutoring team, and other agencies and institutions to
reduce burdens, and pave paths, as much as possible from our
position. back to text |
25. Sometimes we do not admit students because we are concerned about
their academic preparation, or match for MIT; given the strength
of our applicant pool, though, it is more often the case we think
they can do the work, but we simply don't have the space to admit
all the well-qualified and well-matched students who apply. back
to text |
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About Stu Schmill '86
Stu's career at MIT began in 1986 when he graduated from the
Institute with a degree in mechanical engineering. Stu has served the
Institute in a variety of positions, including Director of Crew;
Director of Parent, Student, and Young Alumni Programs in the MIT
Alumni Association; Director of MIT's ...
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ourselves and the people we love
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