The Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is a test designed for students of any age, but draws a large amount of juniors and seniors in high school. This test measures students’ skills in reading, writing and mathematics. The test is out of 2400 points, 800 points from reading, 800 from writing, and 800 from mathematics. If good test scores come from wealth, then the most important issue to consider is, the poorest families having a disadvantage because they cannot afford private elite tutoring to increase their kids score. Many sources say this elite tutoring is a huge problem, but other sources say the tutoring is not what gets you a high score. This is a nationwide test that is often used to help students’ chances …show more content…
If not, how could we, as students, change this and make the test fair for everyone? Is the SAT test fair for all races, genders and socioeconomic statuses? The SATs have changed a vast amount over the years. The SAT exam was created in 1926 by a professor at Princeton University. The test went on and there were many changes made to it up until today's test. Many students who will be applying to college take this test to help show the college what they have to offer academically. Without the SATs some colleges will not even look at a student's application. If there are tricks to this test that allows some students to score higher than others this would not be fair. This question is difficult to get a straight answer from because there is evidence and facts that show the test is fair, then there are other facts and evidence that show that the test is not fair. The fairness of the test comes predominately from the consistency. The students who are sitting next to other students taking the SATs at the same time will be given a similar test with identical questions, but the questions could be in different order to help prevent cheating. Students who are wealthy could easily pay for elite private tutoring. This question targets students and the parents of students, especially those who are about to take the test or will have to take the test in upcoming years. Parents should care about the fairness of the SATs because it could either help or hurt their kids getting into