Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Coaching on SAT I: Reasoning Test Scores
138
Citations
23
References
1999
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationStudent OutcomeTest ScoresInstructional ModelsProgram EvaluationCoachingSat TakersSkilled PerformanceCognitive ScienceRevised SatTest DevelopmentInformal CoachingEducational TestingEducational StatisticsEducational MeasurementPerformance StudiesEducational EvaluationEducational AssessmentAthletic Training
A College Board‐sponsored survey of a nationally representative sample of 1995–96 SAT takers yielded a data base for more than 4, 000 examinees, about 500 of whom had attended formal coaching programs outside their schools. Several alternative analytical methods were used to estimate the effects of coaching on SAT I: Reasoning Test scores. The various analyses produced slightly different estimates. All of the estimates, however, suggested that the effects of coaching are far less than is claimed by major commercial test preparation companies. The revised SAT does not appear to be any more coachable than its predecessor.
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