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Predicting Freshman Grade Point Average From College Admissions Test Scores and State High School Test Scores
Author(s) -
Daniel Koretz,
Carol Yu,
Preeya P. Mbekeani,
Meredith Langi,
Tasmin Dhaliwal,
David Braslow
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
aera open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2332-8584
DOI - 10.1177/2332858416670601
Subject(s) - test (biology) , disadvantage , demographics , mathematics education , psychology , academic achievement , test score , standardized test , ethnic group , achievement test , percentage point , demography , mathematics , statistics , political science , sociology , paleontology , law , biology
The current focus on assessing “college and career readiness” raises an empirical question: How do high school tests compare with college admissions tests in predicting performance in college? We explored this using data from the City University of New York and public colleges in Kentucky. These two systems differ in the choice of college admissions test, the stakes for students on the high school test, and demographics. We predicted freshman grade point average (FGPA) from high school GPA and both college admissions and high school tests in mathematics and English. In both systems, the choice of tests had only trivial effects on the aggregate prediction of FGPA. Adding either test to an equation that included the other had only trivial effects on prediction. Although the findings suggest that the choice of test might advantage or disadvantage different students, it had no substantial effect on the over- and underprediction of FGPA for students classified by race-ethnicity or poverty

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