As college applications rebound among minority students, fee-waiver students, and students from the bottom-quintile of income-making zip codes, we’re seeing an uptick in the numbers of students reporting test scores. The increased adoption of test-optional admissions dropped the number of students reporting scores from 77% to 44%. But, during the last reporting cycle, that number has ticked back up to 49%.
There’s several possible factors for this: increased access to testing and test prep, a “return to normal,” etc. But one factor is very likely something we’ve heard over and over again from college admissions professionals: Test-optional does not mean test-blind.
Admissions policies are all over the map when it comes to their stated position on how they’ll use test scores. But informally, we hear the same thing: not submitting a test score comes off as a red flag, no matter the policy. If you have the option to submit a score, and you don’t, that probably means one thing.
Now, in practice, we know there are lots of reasons students don’t want to take the ACT or SAT: the stress, the cost, the time devoted to test prep that takes away from classwork, a moral or political stance against the tests, and others. But inside the office, often a lack of test score reads like a question mark about your academic readiness.
This isn’t fair, and it often contradicts the stated policy, but criminal defense lawyers will also tell you that Pleading the Fifth is not an admission of guilt as a matter of Supreme Court law, but good luck getting juries to believe that.
So what is the prudent advice that college admissions counselors often give? Submit your score if it will help you. But as we get more and more of this data from Common App, we’ll need to see if this “optional” policy is really optional after all.
Storyboards College Admission Portfolios, LLC