in every test using the SAT alone does better in aggregate.
This is emphatically wrong. From the most pro-SAT source I can think of, SAT’s + High School GPA are the most accurate predictor of first-year grades available. I admit the possibility that if you use a different measure of college success, my point is not valid.
It may be comforting to overstate the value of standardized testing, but that does not make it true, or excuse unfounded generalizations. One should be particularly careful to avoid such generalizations in a blue-green issue like the value of intelligence testing.
I think billswift’s point was that the SAT is a better predictor as opposed to using human judgement as in reading the application letter, etc…
It seems plausible that adding another “objective” measure like the HSGPA will further increase accuracy. But the big point is that using human judgement will DECREASE accuracy.
The really interesting paper is the following as suggested by Alicorn:
Michael Bishop, “In Praise of Epistemic Irresponsibility: How Lazy And Ignorant Can You Be?”
I don’t remember my sources, but I came across this in several published books in the 1990s (I think they were from the late 1980s and early 90s but I’m not sure). This was before they weakened the SAT, so maybe that accounts for the difference, or maybe you’re going by ad copy, rather than cognitive psych reports, which are attempting to show the value of the tests without offending the consumers of the tests.
This is emphatically wrong. From the most pro-SAT source I can think of, SAT’s + High School GPA are the most accurate predictor of first-year grades available. I admit the possibility that if you use a different measure of college success, my point is not valid.
It may be comforting to overstate the value of standardized testing, but that does not make it true, or excuse unfounded generalizations. One should be particularly careful to avoid such generalizations in a blue-green issue like the value of intelligence testing.
I think billswift’s point was that the SAT is a better predictor as opposed to using human judgement as in reading the application letter, etc… It seems plausible that adding another “objective” measure like the HSGPA will further increase accuracy. But the big point is that using human judgement will DECREASE accuracy. The really interesting paper is the following as suggested by Alicorn:
Michael Bishop, “In Praise of Epistemic Irresponsibility: How Lazy And Ignorant Can You Be?”
I don’t remember my sources, but I came across this in several published books in the 1990s (I think they were from the late 1980s and early 90s but I’m not sure). This was before they weakened the SAT, so maybe that accounts for the difference, or maybe you’re going by ad copy, rather than cognitive psych reports, which are attempting to show the value of the tests without offending the consumers of the tests.