Abstract

In the current issue of the Journal of Intelligence, Hannon (2019) reports a novel and intriguing pattern of results that could be interpreted as evidence that the SAT is biased against Hispanic students. Specifically, Hannon’s analyses suggest that non-cognitive factors, such as test anxiety, contribute to SAT performance and the impact of test anxiety on the SAT is stronger among Hispanic students than European-American students. Importantly, this pattern of results was observed after controlling for individual differences in cognitive abilities. We argue that there are multiple issues with Hannon’s investigation and interpretation. For instance, Hannon did not include an adequate number or variety of measures of cognitive ability. In addition, the measure of test anxiety was a retrospective self-report survey on evaluated anxiety rather than a direct measure of situational test anxiety associated with the SAT. Based on these and other observations, we conclude that Hannon’s current results do not provide sufficient evidence to suggest that non-cognitive factors play a significant role in the SAT or that they impact European-American and Hispanic students differently.

Highlights

  • In 2019, 3.7 million students graduated from high school in the United States

  • We argue that there are multiple problems with Hannon’s investigation and interpretation, and we conclude that Hannon’s results do not provide sufficient evidence to suggest that non-cognitive factors play a significant role in the SAT or that they impact European-American and Hispanic students differently

  • Reproduced visualization of for verbal function of ethnicity and test anxiety, and their when controlling cognitive abilities, metacognitive and their interaction controlling for cognitive abilities, performance-avoidance, metacognitive awareness, and SES. when and their interaction when controlling for cognitive abilities, performance-avoidance, metacognitive

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Summary

Introduction

In 2019, 3.7 million students graduated from high school in the United States. Approximately. 2020, 8, 15 to SAT performance and the impact of test anxiety on the SAT is stronger among Hispanic students than European-American students This pattern of results was observed after controlling for individual differences in cognitive abilities. We argue that there are multiple problems with Hannon’s investigation and interpretation, and we conclude that Hannon’s results do not provide sufficient evidence to suggest that non-cognitive factors play a significant role in the SAT or that they impact European-American and Hispanic students differently. The implication of including just two measures is that Hannon did not adequately control for cognitive abilities This makes it difficult to trust estimates of the impact of non-cognitive factors on the SAT. A more comprehensive measurement approach could improve the current investigation, for example, by using cognitive ability measures similar to those in Hannon’s previous work on the latent variable models of cognitive ability to identify sources of individual differences in reading comprehension (Hannon 2012)

Inappropriate Use of Causal Language
Questionable Role of Test Anxiety
Reproduced visualization of overall
What Does the SAT Measure?
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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