April 1, 2025 In the years post-pandemic, several of the Ivy League institutions (along with their shadowed, loosely defined cousins, the “Ivy Plus” universities) have re-instituted their policy of requiring the SAT for admission. I have said several times in public, and I’ll repeat here, that I don’t care if they do or they don’t, […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
This is one of those posts where I’m trying to figure out where to start, and which direction to take it. So let’s just start with the facts. ACT and Revolution Prep yesterday announced a “strategic” partnership that makes the latter one of the former’s “Preferred Test Prep Partners.” For the low, low price of […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
Spoiler alert: Neither “F” stands for free. I have written before about the strange way in which Jeremy Singer was tapped to lead the fix of the FAFSA last year. Everything about it, from the late Friday announcement, to the strange choice of a College Board executive (given College Board’s legendary abuses of student privacy […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
Five years ago on March 25, 2020, all the public universities in Oregon announced that they had adopted a test-optional admission policy for first-year students. Although other institutions around the country were making similar announcements about the same time due to the onset of COVID and cancelled SAT and ACT administrations, the Oregon public universities’ […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
I guess the answer depends on whom you ask. You know about the big glitch in the March 8th SAT. Or, because the College Board has not yet publicly acknowledged it, maybe you don’t. The people at Compass Education posted about it. There have been a few articles about it. But not a word from […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
That is, if you have very low expectations. College Board, as you all know, is a private company that works for itself, via a Board of Trustees who are hand-selected for candidacy by, well, the College Board. They’re a business, and we should understand that. Still, among my many quibbles with the corporation, in the […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
One of the most memorable articles I ever read was in the New York Times, about information cascades, specifically about the value of low-fat diets. The TLDR on the article and the concept is that the case for low-fat diets was never actually proved, but once people get hold of a belief, it can become […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
Last March, during my performance review, I told the provost at OSU I was going to retire sometime about July 1, 2025. When we were discussing succession planning a few years ago, I told him that I would give him at least a year’s notice if I were able to do so, and I decided […]| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
Last week, I wrote about how College Board and the Highly Rejective Colleges are to blame for the concerns being expressed by many high school and independent counselors about the lack of SAT testi…| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog
When all the Ivy League institutions went test-optional as a result of COVID, and some seemed comfortable with the idea, I thought I’d be writing a lot less about the College Board. And I was…| Jon Boeckenstedt's Admissions Weblog