Woke MIT realizes it has to reintroduce standardized tests 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/community-family/woke-mit-realizes-it-has-to-reintroduce-standardized-tests

APRIL 26, 2022 06:30 AMBY HENRY MILLER & TOM HAFER
We wrote last November about MIT, our alma mater, that it "has caved repeatedly 
to the demands of 'wokeness,' treating its students unfairly, compromising the 
quality of its staff, and damaging the institution and academic freedom at 
large." A commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion had become an article 
of faith, with an aggressive program of minority admissions one of the 
commandments.

"Equity" is at the heart of this issue.

It sounds a lot like "equality," and many people glide over it without 
appreciating the difference. In an email one of us received from an MIT 
professor, his signature block said "Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion." 
However, in current usage, they are essentially opposites: Equality means that 
each person is given equal opportunity; equity means that outcomes must be 
equal, without regard for the capabilities or efforts of the individuals 
concerned.

Due in part to the pandemic, but also to achieve more "equity" in admissions, 
for the last two years, MIT dispensed with the requirement that applicants take 
the SAT or ACT tests. But last month, there was a new development: MIT became 
the first prominent university to reinstate the requirement that applicants 
submit SAT or ACT scores.

Stu Schmill, the dean of admissions, described the rationale for the decision 
this way in a blog post : "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."

There was still more woke rationale to come: "Our ability to accurately predict 
student academic success at MIT ⁠is significantly improved by considering 
standardized testing — especially in mathematics." Thus, "not having SAT/ACT 
scores to consider tends to raise socioeconomic barriers to demonstrating 
readiness for our education."

What Schmill was really saying was that MIT doesn’t know what to do with 
students who just can’t cut it. At many universities, there are well-known 
"easy" majors such as physical education, sociology, or gender studies that are 
not, literally or figuratively, rocket science. So, if students find themselves 
unable to pass the coursework to major in, say, nuclear engineering or physics, 
they can move down the academic food chain. But at MIT, there are "General 
Institute Requirements," which are rigorous. Make that extremely rigorous. 
Every undergraduate has to take a semester each of chemistry and biology and 
two each of physics and calculus.

Both MIT and a 2020 study by the University of California found that 
standardized test scores are superior predictors of success for students who 
are minorities or from low-income families. High school grades are often 
inflated, and admission application essays can be "coached" or actually written 
by hired consultants. Thus, MIT administrators were caught in a Catch-22: In 
order to admit and graduate unqualified minority students, they would need to 
lower their academic standards.

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