Bloggers or High Schoolers, Where is the Literary Talent? 284
word munger writes "A few weeks ago, Chad Orzel read a New York Times article which analyzed the best high school writing on the new SAT test. The Times' writer appeared surprised that the best high school writing was so bad. Chad then wondered if the best bloggers could do any better under the same conditions and it was put to the test. Over 500 people tried the timed online test, but just 109 scoreable responses resulted. Professionals graded all the responses which were then posted on a web site where readers can rate the essays themselves, as well as find out the professional score. So who's a better writer, a blogger or a high schooler? You can also read Chad's analysis — or better yet, you can decide for yourself."
The real question... (Score:5, Funny)
bein' articulate gets "u" nowhere (Score:3, Insightful)
If someone writes a long winded treatise on a topic, most people will ignore, and even be annoyed by it. Even worse, they will go for an easy to understand, though inaccurate, criticism of it
So yeah, if you want to be popular
Everyone knows (Score:2, Funny)
take Slashdot for example
Sensationalist Journalism (Score:3, Informative)
For alot of Bloggers, High School (much less College) was quite a long time ago, and most employers aren't quite as pedantic as English Teachers are.
On a related note, on our 'Advanced English Comp' exam that all Juniors have to take at our College you get to make 3 mistakes or you have to take the English Comp course. No, I dont mean 3 major mistakes, I mean anything wrong gets counted against you. For example in this writeup alone, I'm sure I have more then 3 mistakes with comma usage alone, much less any of the other writing conventions.
Re:Sensationalist Journalism (Score:5, Interesting)
Reading the article, it seems like the primary problem is that the bloggers tended to not follow directions and wrote about whatever they actually felt like, instead of what they were supposed to write about.
Re:Sensationalist Journalism (Score:4, Funny)
Mod parent off-topic!
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
What is your opinion on the idea that struggle is a more important measure of success than accomplishment?
Bolding mine.
If you ask someone their opinion on something, of course people are going to not going to follow directions and write 'whatever they actually felt like'. Lemme put it to you another way.
What is your opinion o
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sensationalist Journalism (Score:5, Insightful)
First of all, multitudes of people taking the SAT either lack the skillset required to complete the essay section sucessfully or aren't specifically prepared for the test.
It's not about being a good writer, or being prolific, or even conveying your thoughts. It's only about writing to the test.
Therefore, it's insane to make serious literary criticisms on these writers when they're doing no more than plugging in their personal experiences and bits from US Hisotry to answer the questions. Even the best writers don't necessarily do well; many of my friends, who are much better writers than I, didn't do anywhere near as well as I did. I'm the first to admit I'm not a particularly good writer. But it's not about writing. It's about plugging the test prompt into a preconcieved formula and outputting whatever gobblygook you have to based on the grading rubric. So there are basically a plethora of flaws here.
Looking at more criticism:
"What does this really demonstrate? It's hard to say. Probably, that students who do well on the SAT writing test will also do well writing college application essays. Also, I'll bet that the tactic of Essay #2 (and to a lesser extent #3) will serve as the template for all future test-prep classes, and SAT graders of the future will come to cherish the increasingly rare students following the lead of #4."
Going through the college application process myself, I can tell you that what the college admissions professionals look for is nowhere near the same as what the SAT people look for. The SAT graders are simply looking for compliance with a strict formula and a specific sort of writing. It doesn't delight them to have a new, insightful, or personal spin on things. These "creative" touches simply throw them off their schedule - the graders, even those that grade online, have a cue in the form of a stopsign that warns them if they're going too quickly or too slowly. And the graders themselves get penalized if they grade an essay too far away from the other graders (each essay is graded at least twice). Furthermore, the lowest scoring students (as alluded to in the NYT) just ramble on about themselves or their lives, without relating back to the topic. The graders see far to many of these ineffective essays, so it's both dangerous to write one and dangerous to say that the graders like it when they're written.
What this amounts to is a strict penalty for those essays that are either personal or creative, both qualities that college admissions officers laud.
As for predicting that future test-coaches will advise you to take the tact of essay #2, that is, providing a personal and a literary set of anecdotes, I can assure you that such a strategy HAS been in place for quite a long time. I formulated a basic outline before I even BEGAN studying for the SAT's, because the format on the test is the same as EVERY OTHER type of high school writing prompt in the world. I have taken writing tests in two different states - Florida and Virginia. The tests are indistinguisable from each other. These types of prompts have been around for a while, and are here to stay.
~R
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
> It doesn't delight them to have a new, insightful, or personal spin on things.
The same can be said for TAs, as you will no doubt soon find out. The sad fact is that until you get farther along, and then only if you're in a field that rewards creative writing, you will do far, far better by sticking to formulaic "intro, 3 points of proof, conclusion"-type papers that state your position so clearly you can read it 40 feet away than you will by putting your 'personal spin' on things, because no one
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
> If you ask someone their opinion on something, of course people are going to not going to follow directions and write 'whatever they actually felt like'.
No. If you ask someone their opionion on Subject X, it's not unreasonable to expect them to tell you their position on Subject X, whatever that may be. What is unreasonable is for people to turn in a paper detailing their opionons on Subject Y, why they think asking their opionon of Subject D would have been a more interesting que
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Those are the best teachers.
Re: (Score:2)
fuckload
shitload
assload
and so on.
Re: (Score:2)
I've never done the SAT, but I did do the GRE, and I'm guessing (from my non-american viewpoint) that they're much the same. In the GRE, if you take a good look at the scoring criteria, you can pretty much build up
Re: (Score:2)
This measures the ability to express a basic structural argument. If you can't do this you don't belong in graduate school, whether you can make deep insights into a particular subject or not. If you can't communicate your findings, you're missing one of the fundamental necessities of scientific advancement.
The GRE writing test measures what it needs to very well.
Re: (Score:2)
Repeat after me: The Principia and Finnegans Wake aren't whippe
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Well, you failed English 101. There is no word alot. It is two words, a and lot.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I hesitate about whether I should post this now. When I was at school, I was never confused by the difference between 'lose' and 'loose' until a teacher pointe
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
SAT essay too fast (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Didn't you ever take a test in High School or College that had essay question(s) which weren't given to you in advance?
In your defense, most blog entries aren't exactly comparable to writing a focused essay on a single topic. But if it is comparable, then maybe you're slipping a bit from your school days.
OTOH, I wouldn't really expect
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, but those weren't full essay prompts...they usually asked for one paragraph, and involved reading comprehension. The SAT wanted 3-5 paragraphs of what you thought about a question asked. Much different. The other times I did something like the SAT were in 4th and 8th grade, as part of Florida's state testing. Same idea, but 45 minutes instead of 25. Did much better on those.
Re: (Score:2)
Gordon Rules (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
The other problem with the Gordon Rule is that reading is probably just as, if not more, critical in learning to write effectively. One must learn to write properly by reading well-written material.
I don't disagree that reading is important to good writing; however, I'd dispute that it is more important. It's similar to learning how to drive. In Florida you can get a learner's permit by taking a written test. To get the real driver's license you need to pass the practical exam. Why? Because reading about
Who cares? (Score:2, Insightful)
Come on. Good writing isn't produced like this, and it's not reasonable for the population of a single SAT trial to produce good writing. # of SAT writers infinite monkeys, and SAT examination time infinite. So big deal.
Re: (Score:2)
# of SAT test takers < infinite monkeys
# of hrs in SAT trial < infinite time
please, don't expect shakespeare.
Re:Who cares? (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Such preposterous premonitions against a man who, in the amplitude of his vocabular grandeur, effortlessly dwarves the likes of thy scurrillus vituperations. Of lowly men, thou surely are amongst the most menial in matters of this concern.
See? No troll mod.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Seems some people (at the New York Times) aren't looking at it from that perspective. Most people aren't going to go into their particular field.
Re: (Score:2)
I would like to first submit that the only places where you'd ever require a skill such as this are standardized tests such as the SAT, media punditry, and messageboards (blogging being somewhere in between the latter two). I'd go so far as to say that it's even dissimilar enoug
blogs are not eassays (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
And what the crap are "paraphers"?
Apples, meet Oranges. (Score:5, Interesting)
That is a very odd comparison, to say the least. The 2 groups are different in too many ways. The testing styles are too different in too many ways. The requirements were different as well. Testing conditions were different. Etc. Hardly scientific. But, it does make great press, right? Odd that so many Slashdot stories moan about science vs. , but then they go with a weird story like this where a "study" is presented as science just because the authors used sort-of scientific "talk" to present their "findings." Isn't this the type of story that 20/20 or Dateline makes up to get viewers?
As a writer (yes, you can't tell from my slashdot writing, which proves my point...), one needs limitations when one writes. For example, what reading level shoudl I write to, who is the audience, what is the audience comprehension level, and what style or genre would you prefer for my text. The instructions for both tests give very little of this information. I would find it impossible to write to my audience here... the exam graders/judges.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
A "great writing" score on an SAT would probably result in a scholarship to a prestigious university (Yale, Harvard, etc.). This would likely mean someone would have the ability to write like Dickens or Poe or another "great" ficton writer or poet. I don't believe the time limit itself would be responsible for eliminating s
Ever read a raw manuscript? (Score:5, Insightful)
There seems to be a belief that the first draft of anything should be perfect.
You have an essay to write on a test? no problem, it should look like the finely crafted masterpiece someone else wrote over a period of days, months, or even years. And you have 10 minutes to do it.
People should be introduced to the first draft manuscript of any literature, I think they would be surprised at how awful much of it is.
Re: (Score:2)
As a graduate student, I usually go through three or four drafts before I get something I feel confident turning in. Whether it's an assignment, part of a comp, or an article, I always expect some revisions will be requested by the rater. I've gone through six post-submission revisions on one paper before.
Writing in a compressed timeframe should not be about literary quality, but about the effectiveness of communicating an idea. Sometimes the IM-speak "
Re: (Score:2)
These are, of course, then sent off for editing, but the sub editor usually doesn't make many changes.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ever read a raw manuscript? (Score:5, Informative)
Speaking as a professional writer and magazine editor, I suspect that this is one of the things that holds more people back from becoming good writers. They look at their "finished" product -- their first draft -- and they think it's pretty much OK, maybe has a few flaws, and they plan to do better next time. They don't stop to think that they might be able to do better this time if they would just put the manuscript on a shelf for a day or two, give it a rest, then revisit it with a nice big blue Pilot G2 pen and start self-editing and rewriting. And that, most importantly, there is absolutely no shame in not doing it "perfect" ths first time around. Many professional writers will tell you that the process of rewriting actually takes longer than the process of writing, especially on longer manuscripts. My recommendation is, whatever it is you plan to write, give yourself an artificial deadline a little before you have to turn it in and plan to do some self-editing and rewriting during that time. I find that just sleeping on it for a night usually gives you enough time to revisit your work with fresh eyes.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't see that belief; in fact, I see essay tests as endorsing your view that it is extremely unlikely for the first draft of anything to be perfect. That's what makes essays good for tests (such as the SAT) that are designed to
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I would say that becoming a better writer requires WRITING a lot - not reading more. Reading helps you know what works in a general way (and to av
amirite? (Score:5, Funny)
Where is the Literary Talent? (Score:2)
Well, I always can count on finding it in the Slashdot comments...
Re: (Score:2)
not hard (Score:2)
But really, I can't believe people are complaining about "first drafts" when
1) they're being compared to high school kids. So first draft or final manuscript, high school graduates should out-write high schoolers, especially if they spend a good deal of their time writing
and
2) you should be able to put together a well-written essay that short in 25 minutes.
In any case, this has only increased my hatred for the "blogos
Well no kidding (Score:5, Informative)
For more on the reliability of SAT essay questions as a measure of anything except the ability to pile on verbage, here's an excerpt from another NYT article that ran last year:
"In March, Les Perelman attended a national college writing conference and sat in on a panel on the new SAT writing test. Dr. Perelman is one of the directors of undergraduate writing at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He did doctoral work on testing and develops writing assessments for entering M.I.T. freshmen. He fears that the new 25-minute SAT essay test that started in March - and will be given for the second time on Saturday - is actually teaching high school students terrible writing habits...
In the next weeks, Dr. Perelman studied every graded sample SAT essay that the College Board made public. He looked at the 15 samples in the ScoreWrite book that the College Board distributed to high schools nationwide to prepare students for the new writing section. He reviewed the 23 graded essays on the College Board Web site meant as a guide for students and the 16 writing 'anchor' samples the College Board used to train graders to properly mark essays.
He was stunned by how complete the correlation was between length and score. 'I have never found a quantifiable predictor in 25 years of grading that was anywhere near as strong as this one,' he said. 'If you just graded them based on length without ever reading them, you'd be right over 90 percent of the time.' The shortest essays, typically 100 words, got the lowest grade of one. The longest, about 400 words, got the top grade of six. In between, there was virtually a direct match between length and grade."
So to any high schoolers about to take the SAT: when in doubt, write a lot, in third-person, and in cursive.
Re: (Score:2)
Before I got to high school, my leisure-time writing had a very concise, to-the-point style. High school taught me that to succeed, I had to pad my 300-word essays out to 500 words. I didn't have to actually say anything more, mind you, but if I wanted a good grade I had to use more words to do it.
For all the high school's crowing about how they were preparing me for college, when I actually got into a good university and took some writing cla
Re: (Score:2)
Training For The Test (Score:5, Insightful)
You get to rank kids, but you also get kids that have trained for the test. I have two sisters that are teachers that quite specifically teach to the test-du-jour. I mean not just a couple of weeks, but every single day's learning plan is oriented around the test the kids take that year.
So, we've got kids being trained for a test, which is certainly not an "education." Or maybe that's what passes for an education for the unwashed, shrinking middle-class masses in America?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Umm... it is standardized. It allegedly provides a quick and quantifiable way to compare abilities.
The second that any standardized test stops measuring ability & starts measuring knowledge.. you end up with teachers who teach to the test.
The Law School Aptitude Test is a good example of a standardized test that measures ability and not knowledge. The MCAT is a good example of a standardized test that mostly measures kno
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, and as soon as you test abilities instead of knowledge, the teachers' union claims you're neglecting the fundamentals. In other words, shrink their classes (=less responsibility+increase demand), raise their salaries (but not so much that teaching becomes a viable alternative to industry, that would increase supply), give them more "in-service" days, lower the
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Michele de Montaigne said that if you wan
Actually, tests aren't all that trainable (Score:4, Insightful)
The primary alternative to test scores are grades, which are even worse. They are extremely coachable, greatly influenced by third parties (parents, tutors, smart friends), subject to teacher ass-kissing, and are often a measure of attention to detail and willingness to do the grind rather than mastery of the material.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Fallacy of the excluded middle. A well-designed test can and should test for education, not random teachable facts. It is entirely possible to write such a test. School teachers and college professors do so every day. If the state's board of education can't do the same, the fault lies with the test writers, not the good concept of giving tests and the good concept of testing everyone on the same basic material.
If your test is
Absolutely Unsurprising (Score:5, Insightful)
1) The SAT writing section gives a student only the opportunity to write a first draft.
2) The SAT writing section is almost always on an incredibly boring and uninspired topic, because the subject of the essay must be as equally accessible to all test-takers as possible. It's also quite obvious that it is hard to write well on a subject you could not care less about. The intersection of good writers and those interested in the topic has to be miniscule, if nonexistant.
3) The SAT writing section is graded based on grammatical correctness and the logical ordering of ideas. It takes no account of whether those ideas make canonical sense, only that they were ordered in a consistent and logical manner.
The SAT writing section can not gauge anything besides one's ability to write in the style of the MLA.
It's been said a million times, but I'll say it again: The SAT score only measures one's ability to take the SAT.
Disclosure: I am a recent college grad who did very well on the SATs.
Re:Absolutely Unsurprising (Score:4, Interesting)
They didn't have a written portion of the SAT back in my day, but there were "essay" questions on the New York States Regents Examination for English (a standardize test, but taken by graduating seniors in New York State only). I happened to have an odd "tough" English teacher that taught us exactly what the graders wanted to see: I wrote grossly inane piece of crap, but aced the exam, as you would expect.
And yeah, "Standardized" tests are far from the panacia some people think they are.
misuse of test (Score:5, Insightful)
OTOH, in the real world, we seldom have to develop a formulaic arbitrary piece of writing on a topic that we might not only have no interest in, but no background in. That is a good thing because writing about what you know nothing of, and have no interest in, makes you a hack. Certainly no one going off to college is hoping to be a hack.
A while back an english teacher got a hold of one of my writing and proceeded to 'correct it'. The teacher found several errors on the page, some I didn't realize I made, some that did not change the meaning, some that were bad. Understand I feel like I know who to write, and I feel like I know English. I know to say 'on which side the bread is buttered'. I know that saying 'to boldly go' is wrong, but the correct structure changes the meaning. I understand that as a teacher of English one must be pedantic, but expecting a writer to produce a good product in 25 minutes, on a random subject, is just idiocy. Such a requirement is an insult to the adult process of writing, in which one starts off with an interesting idea, and develops it over time.
Many years ago Byte magazine had a silly essay comparing quality the writings of Hemmingway to the quality of a computer program. Even at the young age I read this, I understood that the analogy was daft, as a computer program must be perfect, and reflects a technical process that changes over time, while a published creative work of fiction is a snapshot of a creative process. The later need not conform to some arbitrary standard of perfection to be a perfectly wonderful tale.
In the end this is one of those studies by one of those people that believes a good SAT score has some bearing on your actual ability to produce a real product, creative, technical, or otherwise. This is not sour grapes. I have always had very respectable standardized test scores, scores in fact that probably overestimate my ability. OTOH my ability to produce has nothing to do with the test scores.
Re:misuse of test (Score:4, Insightful)
With respect to rules and pedantry,
This quote from "The Elements of Style" [bartleby.com] should make it clear that rules are made to be broken - but only advisedly. It is the reason Hemmingway was, and will remain, a better writer than any computer. And why it is sometimes OK to start a sentence with a conjunction. Or why it is acceptable to callously split an infinitive. (Which is not a crime in English anyway unless you think English is actually Latin - which it isn't.) But none of this matters in a standardised test because they are testing competence not brilliance.
"It takes hard writing to make easy reading." (Score:5, Insightful)
These essays seem to be running about 250 words... about a page.
Jack London was proud of himself for turning out 1000 words every day. George Bernard Shaw set his stint at five pages a day.
And of course a professional writer has been preparing to write those words and thinking about them well in advance. And they are on a topic that the writer has selected him- or herself, and has some knowledge of.
So they hit a _high school student_ cold with a topic the student has never seen before and give him or her twenty-five minutes (how on earth did they come up with that figure? Why not a round half-hour, at least?) to do, unprepared, what takes a professional writer a couple of hours, prepared... and people are surprised at the results?
This isn't a test of writing in any meaningful sense of the word. I don't know what it's testing, but it isn't writing.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't find this particularly surprising (Score:2, Informative)
One will get
Re:I don't find this particularly surprising (Score:5, Insightful)
It's easy to say that little Timmy is a math prodigy because he's solving integrals in his head by the time he's in seventh grade. It's very difficult to say that little Billy is a literary prodigy because the degree of assimilation and the quality of work produced are both measured very subjectively. In math and science, there are simple, fairly straightforward ways of measuring how well a student _recalls_ concepts and how well they can _apply_ the concepts. That latter one does require someone to read a bunch of logic on paper, and then estimate how well the kid has applied the concepts they've learned (i.e. does the student seem to understand "force" or is she just plugging and chugging), but that can be objectively determined (did she get the right answer, and do her steps to that answer clear and logical).
In writing, someone has to actually sit down and read everything they student has written, judge it as objectively as they can, and then assign it a number grade. You could give a test on sentence structure, comprehension, and so on--which they do--and still have no idea if the kid can write. The writing needs to be clear and logical, but what's clear and logical in an essay is by no means as straightforward as what's clear and logical in a physics problem solution.
What I'm trying to say, really, is that there is probably a bias towards math at least in some part because basic-level math is very easy to grade and evaluate, whereas to judge writing is more nebulous.
With a question like this ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Horrible prompt (Score:5, Insightful)
Do memories hinder or help people in their effort to learn from the past and succeed in the present?
That is an incredibly difficult question that philosophers could spend a lifetime thinking about. In fact, I've found that many philosophers addressing these difficult issues often have glaring logical holes, unfounded assumptions, and most strikingly, atrocious writing.
For some reason, the SAT believes that ambiguous, poorly crafted prompts somehow judge a student's writing abilities. If they want to judge a student's writing skills, this would be a much better prompt:
Your friend is contemplating cheating on the SAT. Write a letter to dissuade him/her from doing so.
At least there are concrete and fairly obvious reasons here, and I wager that you'd very quickly be able to see which students can write well and which can barely craft coherent sentences.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
How would you learn anything at all if you couldn't remember what you did and what were the results?
Re:Horrible prompt (Score:5, Insightful)
"Given that people with no memories demonstrably fail to learn anything, including simple things like where they are or what day it is, clearly they help."
If I were taking this test, I could easily expand that into the 5-Paragraph Magic Form I was taught for writing Unreadable Insipid Essays (TM), but why? For that matter I could cut that down by another half and still answer the question with this argument that I find undeniable.
(I could twist and stretch the definition of "memory" and "learning" to make it not true, but across most combination of definitions of memory and learning this argument holds. You'd have to get pretty pedantically biological to make it false.)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Paragraph 1 : Argument (I will prove...)
Sentences : General statement, more specific statement, more specific statement, make point.
Paragraphs 2-4 : Reason with multiple supporting statements/sources. (An example is.... Because...)
Sentences : State reason, support reason (as needed), restate reason
Paragraph 5 : Restate argument (I have proved...)
Sentences : Restate point, more general statement, more general statement, closing statement.
Being taught only th
And that.. (Score:2)
Re:Horrible prompt (Score:5, Funny)
"Do legs hinder or help people in their effort to train for and win the fifty-yard dash?"
Throughout the ages, human beings have relied on their legs for moving about. From walking to running to hopping, the human leg has indeed proven itself a most valuable and celebrated mobility-enabling appendage. It should come as no startling realization, then, to learn that most human sports are derived from activities that demonstrate the prowness of the leg. And perhaps no sport showcases the raw power of the leg than the fifty-yard-dash.
Oops, it's not supposed to be about the fifty-yard dash, but the importance or unimportance of the leg to training for and successfully running the fifty-yard dash. Good thing I already graduated from college, where I learned quickly that most professors can't write worth a damn anyhow. Perhaps that's the true objective of the SAT writing test - can you quickly write on any subject in such a way as to appeal to a narrow audience? If so, you can make it through the university system without much effort.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The idea is to give them a prompt without a right or wrong answer, forcing them to evaluate both positions and come to a conclusion. The ideal essay then would explore the benefits and detriments of each possible answer and out of that decide whether one or the other is the better response.
Re: (Score:2)
I complete agree. I believe that
Timed test (Score:2)
Well, I didn't know my Physics prof had a blog... (Score:2)
What happened to writing being considered an art? (Score:3, Interesting)
"who is better at critical thinking?" The bloggers, or high school kids with little life experience under their belt?
To say this is a test of writing, is just sick. Writing requires passion, inspiration, and thought. After visiting the site and seeing what exactly the question/comment that the "contestants" were required to write about, I didn't even want to bother looking at any of the submissions.
Another big difference, is that the SAT test takers are under pressure to perform for their educational future, whereas the "bloggers" don't really have anything riding on it.
I like to fancy myself a writer, but I know i'm not consistant with it. I really only write when I'm inspired to do so, and usually it's to vent whatever crappy experience I'm going through or as a release valve to the craziness that goes on in my head from time to time.
That's a far cry from asking my opinion in regards to a certain subject, then timing me as to how fast I can composite an opinion and express it in writing.
If this were to be an accurate accounting of flat out writing skill and the use of the english language, a better test would be to have the "contestants" write out a technical manual, and judge it on who could clearly and best explain how to setup your widget du jour.
how about SAT writers take that test? (Score:2, Informative)
Directions: Think carefully about the issue presented in the following excerpt and the assignment below.
'I have learned that success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying to succeed.'
-- Booker T. Washington
Assignment: What is your opinion on the idea that struggle is a more important measure of success than accomplishment? Plan and write an essay in which you develop your point of view on this issue. Su
Summary for those who didn't read the article (Score:2)
Where is the Literary Talent? (Score:2, Funny)
not with a fox,
No here not there
Not anywhere.
The SAT is a failure (Score:5, Insightful)
20% scoreable (Score:2)
The rest were probably dupes.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Absolutely. Exams are also unfair because they give an advantage to students who have revised for them. You should write to your congressman.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, homework unfairly discriminates against students who choose not to do it...
Re:this study is a little iffy (Score:5, Funny)
My Congressman? (Score:5, Funny)
I tried, but he kept wanting to know what I was wearing and what my penis size was.
Re: (Score:2)