As some of you probably heard, ETS had a printing error on the June SAT test booklet, which affected close to a half million U.S. test takers.
Here's CB's official statement/solution:
https://lp.collegeboard.org/information-regarding-the-saturday-june-6-sat-administrationIn short, the test booklets indicated a 25 minute time limit rather than 20 minutes on one of the reading sections. As a result, that reading section as well as a math section that was taken by some students while others took the affected reading section will not be graded. This means that the number of questions will now be 70.4% (Math) and 71.6% (Reading)of the intended total. CB claims that statistical analysis indicates that the scores will still be reliable. While I think that the statement is probably true, another problem is the perception of the colleges/organizations to scores from this irregular administration.
The reason why I think that the statement is probably true is that based on a quick and dirty examination of common differences in section scores, most test takers will probably score within 30 points without the 3rd section. Furthermore, probably across the board but definitely at least at the higher end, a difference of 30 points is not significant in the sense that the same person can be expected to score within a 30 point range on any given day. However, any particular person could be an outlier and sometimes even those 30 points can make the difference between making the cut or not.
The crazy thing is that many (if not most) test takers only took 20 minutes on those sections as intended and CB have documentations (Proctor's log of start/stop times for each section) of which groups took the test as intended but they are throwing out those two sections for everyone. I understand this may have to do with the sophisticated "equating" process that CB uses to account for minor differences in test difficulty and ability levels of students at each administration.
Anyhow, what do you all think?
Given that almost 30% of the questions will go unscored, would you still consider the June SAT scores valid?
Do you think that colleges, talent searches, etc. will accept these scores as valid?
Do you think that more students will be disadvantaged rather than advantaged by fewer questions? (This means you have to miss fewer questions to get the same score).