aleclair wrote:
One of those "shock stories" the popular media like to tell is how some rich families hire "image consultants" for their middle-school kids so they can begin to prep for going to a top-tier university by ensuring that everything their student does is towards that goal. I've no idea what the truth value of those stories are, but it's the same general idea as getting a SAT prep book in 9th grade.
If you open the SAT prep book, you'll realize quickly that unless you were allowed to take Algebra 2 in 9th grade, you still don't know all the math needed to complete the math section. So, yes, it was a premature gift.
I'm not a fan of the American idea that everyone needs to go to college. Sure, most jobs are skill-based, but not everyone's going to do well in a college environment. What will happen to people who don't work well in the academic environment?
But at some point in a year or two you will need to study for the SAT if you want to go to college - and, unfortunately, the only way I know of to be good at the SAT is by studying for it. It doesn't test academic knowledge, nor does it test how well you take tests. It merely tests how well you can answer SAT-style questions.
That's why I would love the SAT to be taken out of consideration when choosing for a college. It is absolutely pointless, and really tests nothing that you really learned in high school.