|
By Vicki Wood, PowerScore SAT Instructor
Published
in The Link
I must admit that I was skeptical of test preparation
when I started working for PowerScore Test Preparation.
After all, when I took the ACT nearly sixteen
years ago, I used a hand-me-down prep book that
didn’t teach me much more than the difference
between it’s and its, yet I scored well
enough to earn acceptance letters from several
universities. What could test preparation courses
teach me that I couldn’t learn on my own?
I felt it might be different if I were preparing
to take a graduate test, like the Law School Admissions
Test (LSAT) or the General Management Admission
Test (GMAT). These tests, unlike the SAT, are
not curriculum-based; they involve logic and abstract
reasoning, skills that are often ignored in high
school and college, but which could easily taught
in a prep course. I was not convinced that significant
score increases could be achieved on an exam that
tested a culmination of the math and verbal curriculum
a student learns in high school. This changed,
however, soon after I decided to become an SAT
instructor.
A former middle school teacher, I left teaching
to join PowerScore’s administrative team,
but I missed working with students. Fortunately,
the company had a few openings for evening SAT
instructors; unfortunately, instructors had to
score in the 99th percentile on a real SAT. I
had never even taken the SAT and my previous ACT
scores weren’t even close to the top one
percent! But teaching was important to me, so
I decided to register and study for the test.
I did all of this in secret. I was afraid that
my scores would not meet the PowerScore requirement,
and didn’t want to embarrass myself in front
of my coworkers or my supervisor. For the next
month, I went home each evening and used old high
school and college textbooks to relearn algebra
and geometry and the rules of grammar. I programmed
math formulas into my calculator and studied hundreds
of vocabulary flashcards. I took practice test
after practice test after practice test. And in
March of 2005, I was the only thirty-something
in a high school full of teenagers, taking the
very first official administration of the new
SAT.
The morning my scores arrived two weeks later,
I was sitting in my office, envisioning the moment
I could tell my boss what I had accomplished and
looking at the schedule of an upcoming SAT course
that I could teach. So when the numbers flashed
across the computer screen—740 Reading,
610 Math, and 700 Writing—I was devastated.
A 2050 was only in the 93rd percentile! Many students
would be thrilled with this SAT score, but I needed
something good enough for Harvard or Yale if I
wanted to teach for PowerScore. I imagine I felt
like many teenagers that morning, who had learned
their score wasn’t high enough to apply
to their school of choice.
At some point in the day, my devastation outweighed
my shame and I confessed everything to my supervisor—the
secret study sessions, the five hour testing day,
even the insufficient score. To my relief, he
said that he was proud of me. And then to my astonishment,
he told me that I was taking the test again. After
I took a PowerScore SAT class.
That’s how I found myself sitting in on
the very course I had envisioned teaching. At
the start of the class, I believed that small
score increases were possible with independent
study (and secretly feared I had reached my maximum
score potential). But by the time we were halfway
through the first lesson, I realized that the
SAT was so much more than it appeared to be. It
was a reasoning test like the LSAT and GMAT, and
many of the questions were designed to stump or
trick the average test taker. Throughout the next
five weeks, I learned to recognize patterns among
the reading questions, search for gimmicks in
the math sections, and analyze each word or phrase
in the writing questions. Take numerical sequences
as an example. Nearly every SAT test has one math
question about sequences. Because the test is
designed to be taken without a calculator (even
though calculators are allowed), any question
that asks for a term higher than the 6th term
in the sequence most likely has a simple pattern
that you must recognize in order to compute the
term. No calculator or formula can find this term
for you, yet the average teenager believes there
is a formula for every math problem, and will
immediately try to create one (with a calculator,
no less), wasting valuable time. While the SAT
relies on typical high school curriculum as a
basis for test questions, the majority of the
questions require abstract reasoning in order
to solve them quickly and correctly. As I attended
the PowerScore SAT course, I learned to memorize
question patterns and strategies, rather than
formulas and rules.
I took the test again in June, just three months
after my initial attempt. My score increased by
220 points—800 Reading, 670 Math, and 790
Writing—and I achieved my 99th percentile
goal. The math score still irks me, especially
after teaching the course for a year and picking
up new information I missed the first time around,
but I will continue taking the test each year
for research purposes. I am confident my math
results will be comparable to my reading and writing
scores on my next attempt.
Needless to say, I am now a true believer of test
preparation for the SAT, ACT, and PSAT. This is
why so many test prep companies, including PowerScore,
guarantee a substantial score increase for students
who attend their courses. In my most recent SAT
course for the May 2006 exam, one of my students
increased his score by 490 points—the difference
between the 31st percentile and the 87th percentile!
Peter is an above-average student, but at the
start of the class, he was unable to see the simple
solutions behind difficult-sounding questions.
Using PowerScore methods, he earned a 1920, resulting
in a state scholarship and admission to his first
choice of colleges.
It is important to prepare your homeschooled student
for the standardized tests used for college admission.
These test scores are the “great equalizer”
on college applications; it is nearly impossible
to compare the curriculum at a prestigious prep
school to the curriculum at a public high school
or to the curriculum of a homeschool program,
so grades are viewed subjectively. One school’s
B+ might be another program’s C. However,
the SAT and the ACT are a standardized tests,
so the test scores of a prep school student, a
public school student, and a homeschooled student
are easily compared. Furthermore, because homeschool
curriculums are so widely varied and thus unfamiliar
to college admissions boards, a standardized test
score is the primary admission criterion used
to judge most homeschooled applicants. To help
your students have a competitive edge on test
day, consider the following methods of test preparation:
Prep
Books: Many homeschoolers prefer to incorporate
SAT and ACT prep into their curriculum by purchasing
test-specific preparation books (like the hand-me-down
book I used to study for the ACT). Quality prep
books can offer valuable tips and information
and most will review relevant curriculum for the
test. A major drawback to prep books, however,
is their use of simulated questions. Experts agree
that the best practice for any standardized test
comes from the use of real test questions. Due
to licensing rights, these real questions are
only published by the producers of the tests.
Test prep books published by private companies
contain questions written by the authors of the
book, rather than the test-makers, so they may
not be accurate representations of the real tests.
If you choose to use prep books in your curriculum,
I recommend The Official SAT Study Guide and The
Real ACT Prep Guide, published by the makers of
the test and the only books that contain real
SAT and ACT questions.
I
have also viewed several prep books that contain
untested material or use formulas that are not
required. For example, in my own preparation for
my first SAT test, I stumbled upon a prep book
that gave a formula for determining the nth term
of a sequence. I programmed this formula in my
calculator, and then tried to use it on the test
to find the 54th term of a sequence. It didn’t
work. Once I took the PowerScore course, I realized
that this formula was for finding a term in a
geometric sequence, and that the SAT would never
ask for the 54th term in a geometric sequence.
As I mentioned earlier, I should have looked for
a simple pattern rather than waste valuable time
searching for and using a formula that wouldn’t
work anyway. To determine if a prep book contains
irrelevant curriculum, you’ll need to carefully
analyze the questions and review material contained
in The Official SAT Study Guide and The Real ACT
Prep Guide. These books can be found in your local
bookstore, or on www.collegeboard.com or www.powerscore.com.
Tutoring:
Because your homeschooled student is accustomed
to working with you one-on-one, private tutoring
is a logical choice for SAT and ACT preparation.
It places your student’s standardized test
provision into the hands of an expert and frees
you from the burden of learning the curriculum,
patterns, and secrets of the test. As you already
know, one-on-one instruction is the most effective
and efficient way to learn, but tutoring is also
extremely beneficial for students who only need
help in one specific area of the test. Teenagers
with busy schedules prefer tutoring because most
tutors are willing to meet at times and locations
convenient to the student. The only disadvantage
to tutoring is the expense; private tutoring costs
significantly more than prep books or courses.
Should
you chose to employ a private tutor for your child’s
SAT or ACT preparation, either through an individual
tutor or a test preparation company, be sure to
inquire about the tutor’s qualifications.
It is important to confirm that the tutor has
taken an official SAT or ACT, and that his or
her score reflects a mastery of the test. Many
companies hire instructors that have never taken
the real test, so it is impossible for them to
convey the testing experience to the student.
All PowerScore tutors are SAT instructors and
are required to score in the 99th percentile.
Telephone tutoring is available if you don’t
live near one of our instructors.
You
should also verify that the tutoring materials
include real questions. Again, it is imperative
that students practice with The Official SAT Study
Guide and The Real ACT Prep Guide in order to
parallel the types of questions they will encounter
on test day.
Prep
Courses: Courses for SAT and ACT preparation are
a cost-effective way to ensure that your child
covers the entire curriculum included on each
of the tests. Most test prep companies have teams
of experts that design comprehensive courses based
on every available past and present real test
question. Because these companies have been researching
test prep since before your homeschooler learned
to read, they have access to many more questions
and test trends and can adjust their curriculum
accordingly. Many test prep programs include proctored
practice tests, an invaluable experience that
simulates real testing conditions on test day.
While students should take additional practice
tests at home, it is impossible for parents or
tutors to recreate the testing climate without
a classroom setting. Test preparation courses
have proven so successful that all high-caliber
companies offer a score increase guarantee. The
only difficulty students report is adjusting their
schedule to attend class. Nearly all SAT and ACT
prep courses mimic college course schedules, so
while it may be a challenge for a teenager to
rearrange their extracurricular activities, they
gain a preliminary college experience by attending
class two or three days each week.
Homeschoolers
who decide to enroll their students in a prep
course should also inquire about the qualifications
of the instructor and the validity of the course
material. All instructors should be SAT or ACT
experts and have proven their proficiency on a
real test. The course materials and practice tests
should use real test questions and include extensive
supplementary material, such as lessons books,
homework assignments, flashcards, and admissions
guides. Also ask whether the company provides
instructor support outside of the classroom through
a homework hotline or an email assistance program.
PowerScore offers a weekend course for under $300,
or a full-length intensive course with 46 hours
of lecture time. We can set up a special class
for a group of 10 or more homeschooled students,
an excellent choice if you are looking for a course
with a specific schedule and location.
Whichever
program you choose, your student will ultimately
benefit by studying for the SAT or the ACT. As
with so many endeavors, practice is the one true
path to improvement, and any exposure to the tests
is better than none. I think back to that ACT
score from high school and how I was simply happy
that it was adequate for college admission. It’s
only now that I am repaying college loans that
I realize a simple preparation course could have
helped me earn countless scholarships and financial
freedom, not to mention increased opportunities
to attend prestigious colleges. Don’t get
me wrong—I love working with students through
PowerScore—but I’ll always wonder
where my career might have taken me or what it
would have earned me if I had attended an Ivy
League school. To make sure that your homeschooled
student has every available college and career
opportunity in the future, emphasize test preparation
in your curriculum today.
For
more information about PowerScore, please visit
www.powerscore.com
or email vwood@powerscore.com
for questions about the article.
|