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-   -   "New SAT Won’t Include Obscure Vocabulary Words" (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/new-sat-wont-include-obscure-vocabulary-words-1011605/)

ira Apr 16th, 2014 03:58 AM

"New SAT Won’t Include Obscure Vocabulary Words"
 
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/16/ed...-words.html?hp

"... the vocabulary questions ... will no longer include obscure words. Instead, the focus will be on what the College Board calls “high utility” words that appear in many contexts, in many disciplines — often with shifting meanings — and they will be tested in context. For example, a question based on a passage about an artist who “vacated” from a tradition of landscape painting, asks whether it would be better to substitute the word “evacuated,” “departed” or “retired,” or to leave the sentence unchanged".

Wow. Just like in grade school.

Another example of the general lessening of standards and the dumbing down of the American mind.

If the kids can no longer pass the test, change the test.

((I))
What "obscure" words do you think should be kept? Nothing over 3 syllables, please.

bilboburgler Apr 16th, 2014 04:37 AM

vacated, I love working with people from the US. They seem to "take leave" or going on "vacation" not sure what "vacated" means is it some sort of colon cleaning.

Two degrees but still struggle with special words :-)

Hi Ira

adrienne Apr 16th, 2014 06:11 AM

Hi Ira - are you sure you don't want this is the Lounge?

bvlenci Apr 16th, 2014 06:11 AM

Do you have to take the SAT now to travel in Europe?

adrienne Apr 16th, 2014 06:12 AM

in the Lounge.

nytraveler Apr 16th, 2014 09:38 AM

Who gets to decide what "obscure" is? Is the SAT now testing at 8th grade level?

Tabernash2 Apr 16th, 2014 10:11 AM

Hmmmm. I guess I thought testing on "obscure" words was a way to see if the student is average or above average in her vocabulary.

"Dumbing down" is right.

november_moon Apr 16th, 2014 02:38 PM

I always thought that the obscure words were meant to give an edge to students whose parents could afford to send them to SAT prep classes, not as a measure of actual vocabulary proficiency.

girlonthego Apr 16th, 2014 02:49 PM

Personally, I don't know very many kids who do well on the vocabulary section. I was an avid reader as a kid and I did rather poorly on the english portion. On the other hand, I aced the writing test which was an optional test given on a different day. Nobody cared about writing back in the day.

My one DD aced every vocabulary test in Honors English in high school without studying. She bombed the English portion of the SATs. I am guessing the SAT's vocab section is obscure words that most kids don't know or have rarely seen. Kudos to the kids who do well on that section.

princesslily Apr 16th, 2014 02:59 PM

Poor kiddies won't have a reason to even learn words for a test, theyll be the drone workers of the future. America the uneducated.

girlonthego Apr 16th, 2014 03:03 PM

As far as I know, they haven't learned them anyway, thus the lousy scores.

clarkgriswold Apr 16th, 2014 03:06 PM

The number of universities not requiring the SATs is growing. So they've got to change it up or die.

travelgourmet Apr 16th, 2014 03:06 PM

I personally think that writing and speaking should primarily be about communication. Peppering your speech or writing with obscure words is not, IMO, something to be terribly proud of. If you stand behind what you say, then there is no reason to gussy up the language.

As for ira's "concerns", old people simply don't like change.

<i>I always thought that the obscure words were meant to give an edge to students whose parents could afford to send them to SAT prep classes, not as a measure of actual vocabulary proficiency.</i>

I'm not sure that was the intent, but that has certainly been the result.

travelgourmet Apr 16th, 2014 03:08 PM

<i>Poor kiddies won't have a reason to even learn words for a test, theyll be the drone workers of the future. America the uneducated.</i>

That some folks think memorizing vocabulary words amounts to education is precisely what is wrong with education in the US (and elsewhere).

november_moon Apr 16th, 2014 03:10 PM

"Peppering your speech or writing with obscure words is not, IMO, something to be terribly proud of."

I have an aunt who does this. And then another aunt who takes great pleasure in "translating" what she has said into normal words :) It's pretty entertaining for the rest of us.

vincenzo32951 Apr 16th, 2014 03:13 PM

I'll defend the SAT people, to a point.

The referenced article says they won't know if the new test will be a better predictor of college success than the old test. If it does, then it's a good change.

The other issue that was mentioned was the belief that the change will enable the test to better gauge a student's achievement in high school, instead of allowing students who can afford prep courses to have an edge. If that's true -- and there is an "if" in there -- I endorse the change.

Tabernash2 Apr 16th, 2014 03:25 PM

"I always thought that the obscure words were meant to give an edge to students whose parents could afford to send them to SAT prep classes, not as a measure of actual vocabulary proficiency."

This wasn't true in our experiences. You can study for the SAT or ACT by yourself using a number of methods. We bought the workbook but didn't pay for classes in person.

princesslily Apr 16th, 2014 03:28 PM

Travelgrommet doesn't know memorisation is an inescapable part of education, why am I not surprised. Get those zip up coveralls ready lol.

jahoulih Apr 16th, 2014 03:37 PM

Some folks think reading widely, and learning a lot of words in the process, amounts to education.

jahoulih Apr 16th, 2014 03:44 PM

It's sort of unhelpful that the Times article doesn't give any examples of "obscure" words that used to be on the test, but won't be any longer.


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