Scores encourage college tries
Marisa O’Neil
Few local students opt to take the American College Testing Program,
but those who did this year beat the state and national averages, as
they have the past five years.
In the testing results released today, 2004 graduating seniors in
Newport-Mesa Unified School District earned an average composite
score of 23.2 out of 36 points. Only 228 Newport-Mesa students took
the test, placing it far behind the Scholastic Aptitude Test in
popularity.
“It seems we’re competitive with other schools across the state
and nationally,” Assistant Supt. of Secondary Education Jaime
Castellanos said of the ACT. “But we are having some of the better
kids take these tests.”
Like the SAT, the ACT is meant to measure a student’s readiness
for college. Students who plan on going to college usually take one,
the other or sometimes both.
Newport-Mesa Unified School District’s students performed better
than the 2004 state average of 21.6 out of 36 points. The national
average was 20.9 points.
The test is broken into four sections, while the SAT is broken
into only two -- verbal and math.
In Newport-Mesa, students scored an average 22.8 in English, 23.7
in math, 23.6 in reading and 22.1 in science reasoning. All the
scores are up less than a point from last year.
Last year, 218 students took the test and scored an average
composite score of 22.6, above the national average of 20.8 and state
average of 21.5.
About as many students at each of the district’s main high schools
-- Estancia, Newport Harbor, Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar -- took
the SAT as took the ACT districtwide, said Peggy Anatol, director of
curriculum and assessment for the district.
“It’s definitely the college-bound kids who are taking it,”
Castellanos said. “Most colleges accept both [tests], but it depends
which you’re going to.”
University of California and California State campuses both accept
ACT scores for admissions, ACT spokesman Ken Gullette said. This
year, 50,000 students took the ACT, compared with only 40,000 two
years ago.
“More and more students in California are beginning to realize
they do have an alternative to the SAT,” Gullette said.
Some students perform better on the ACT, he said. That test does
not use analogies, as the SAT does, and though it tests math up to
trigonometry, the math only counts for 25% of the test score, he
said.
“It’s an individual choice,” Castellanos said. “The counselors
push students to take both tests.”
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