Homeschoolers Creaming Other Students on the SAT

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Homeschoolers Creaming Other Students on the SAT
Homeschoolers Creaming Other Students on the SAT | Annie Holmquist

Last summer, George Washington University announced that it would no longer require students to submit their SAT or ACT scores as incoming freshmen. This move was made because the university “had concerns that students who could be successful at GW felt discouraged from applying if their scores were not as strong as their high school performance.”

Some students, however, did not get off so easy. Homeschoolers, the college noted, would still have to submit their SAT scores before they could be admitted.

While such a caveat seems rather unfair, a new survey of 2014 SAT scores shows that the requirement shouldn’t be much of a hindrance to homeschool graduates.

In early June, Dr. Brian Ray of the National Home Education Research Institute released findings on how homeschool students match up against other students on the SAT exam. The results in the table below show that homeschool students are far outpacing their traditional school counterparts, particularly in the areas of reading and writing.

homeschoolsatscores.png


Last year, a number of news organizations reported that students in traditional schools were bombing the SAT left and right. Bloombergcreated several historical charts showing SAT trends all the way back to 1972. As the reading graph below shows, the scores of today’s homeschoolers far exceed those of students in traditional school even before these scores began to tank.

readingsatscore.png


Because of plummeting trends like these, testing industries like the SAT have sought to make their exams easier because so many students are struggling to get decent scores.

But if young homeschool students don’t seem to be having any trouble with the exams – and even seem to be achieving historically high scores – is it really a good idea lower the SAT bar?

Is it possible that traditional schools are failing to impart the well-rounded course of knowledge which their students need in order to keep up with the homeschooled ones?

Originally published on Intellectual Takeout
 

Hawaiian Punch

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That's good and all but I often found home schooled kids strange, withdrawn with no social skills.

Pretty much. I had family that was homeschooled. While they all went to elite schools and shyt, they lack any social skills. They come across like some black Mormons and shyt. Very weird
 

Sauce Dab

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That's cool but I think I'd still choose school over home school if I had to do it all over again. The kids I knew who were homeschooled only friends were there cousins who would visit every now and then :to::huhldup:
 

The_Sheff

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The key to all of this is having parents who give a shyt about their kids education. If you have that then they will do well in public, private, or home schooling. You take a child whose parents see school as a personal day care and have those parents home school that child and I guarantee you those SAT scores wont be so high.
 

George's Dilemma

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Looks like a win for the introverted. It's noteworthy there wasn't much of a difference in the math scores. The huge score gaps on writing and critical reading makes sense though.
 

rapbeats

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The key to all of this is having parents who give a shyt about their kids education. If you have that then they will do well in public, private, or home schooling. You take a child whose parents see school as a personal day care and have those parents home school that child and I guarantee you those SAT scores wont be so high.
partially right, partially wrong. obviously great parents will make for a solid student.

BUT, homeschooling even students that would otherwise become poor students even with a decent parent. is due to a few reasons. #1 you get to the meat of the information and you can go over it as many times as you like. you can't do that in public/private school. but you can at the house with home schooling. this is the KEY. being able to conquer the things you dont get quickly before you move on means that once you move on you actually know all the material not just some of it like most public/private school kids.

and for a lot of kids the social aspect of school is actually more of a bad thing than a good thing.
you hang around with other people who dont want to study or do well in school. and you end up slacking off. no matter what your parents say. bad influences outside the home can get you caught up. and the other social stuff like feeling the need to get chicks if you're a dude, or have a boyfriend if you're a girl. or be at tough guy, not get punked by the school bully. being bullied in general doesnt happen for home schoolers. being an awkward kid at home doesnt have the negative affects as being one at a legit school.. all these things will affect kids negatively. what if you're a guy not into sports? thats looked down on in regular school. but no one cares at home.

last but not least for black kids specifically you dont have to deal racist teachers hating on you. ESPECIALLY HATING ON LITTLE BLACK BOYS. telling them they aint about ish... telling them they aint going to be ish... always sending them to the office for non extreme situations. keeping them from learning. recommending to put these kids into special -ed. even though they dont have a learning disability, etc, etc, etc.
 

rapbeats

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Looks like a win for the introverted. It's noteworthy there wasn't much of a difference in the math scores. The huge score gaps on writing and critical reading makes sense though.
i saw that too on the math part. which tells me math is harder to teach if you yourself(the parent) is not good/great at teaching math.
 
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