THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT

                         THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT
                 Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SUNDAY, June 12, 1994                    TAG: 9406120072 
SECTION: FRONT                     PAGE: A2    EDITION: FINAL  
SOURCE: THE NEW YORK TIMES 
DATELINE: 940612                                 LENGTH: Medium 

SAT SCORES WILL RISE AFTER AN ADJUSTMENT BY THE COLLEGE BOARD

{LEAD} The SAT score of the average American high school student will soon be going up 100 points. However, that doesn't mean that anyone is getting smarter.

Beginning in April 1995, the College Board, based in Manhattan, will be recalibrating its scoring of the SAT. The bottom score will still be 200 and the top 800, but it will be easier for everyone to get higher scores.

{REST} A 430 score on the verbal section of the SAT will suddenly become a 510 under the new scoring. A 730 verbal score will become an 800.

College Board officials know they are inviting potshots on this one.

``The question people will ask,'' said Bradley J. Quin, a senior project director of the College Board, ``is, `Aren't you just making kids feel better by giving them higher scores?'

``The answer is absolutely, positively not. The performance that generates a 424 today will now gernate a 500. The kid is no brighter, doesn't have any more bright answers, it's just the label is higher. Everyone will know.''

Quin said they were making the change so students would have a better sense of what their scores mean. When the current scoring system was established in 1941, 500 was the average score for each test, the math and verbal. Those scores have been declining for nearly four decades. The average verbal score today is 424; the average math score, 478.

So the College Board officials have decided to ``recenter'' the scale, changing it so the average student will once again get scores of 500 in verbal and math.

That means by answering the same number of questions correctly, typical students will get about 80 extra points on the verbal and 20 on the math. For over half a century, a raw score of 35 on the verbal test of 78 questions has translated into a 430 score; now a raw score of 35 will mean a score of 510. For the raw score, students get one point for each correct answer; they lose a quarter-point for each wrong answer.

``This way a student will know if he gets a 510, he's a little above average. A 490 is a little below average,'' Quin said.

The inflated SAT scores will not be a secret, of course. The College Board will be blitzing admissions offices with material about the SAT scoring change.

{KEYWORDS} STANDARDIZED TEST SCHOLASTIC APTITUDE TEST SCHOLASTIC ASSESSMENT TESTS by CNB