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Things You Need To Know About SAT Adversity Score

The SAT Adversity Score is the new score that will be measured by the college boards just like Math and verbal skills. The SAT Adversity Score is a program that allows universities and colleges to get the fuller picture of the student’s background and is officially called as Environmental Context Dashboard which is determined and calculated using some socio-economic factors. If you are on SAT test prep, then you must know a few things about the SAT Adversity score before taking admissions into colleges and university. We have listed a few vital things that will help you understand how your Adversity Score will affect your Admission. 

What is the New SAT Adversity Score?

It is a new tool for admissions that measures the data of the student’s economic and social adversity that they have faced. The Adversity Score is evaluated using the metrics of 15 factors divided by 3 Categories that we will discuss further. The Adversity score is rolling out nationwide to level the admission processes in the colleges. If you are worried about the factors that will affect your score, then there is a lot to know, because there are various variables that will affect the Adversity Score.

What are factors that are accounted into the Score?

There are mainly 15 factors that will account for determining your score that address a student’s home life, community, and school system of the student. It also takes into account whether the student has a single parent, or comes from a median income family, education level of the parents and family members or do the student have the availability of the advanced placement classes, what is the environment of the student’s high school. It has determined the local crime rate if a student has any and poverty rate of the student.   

It is important to note that all these data are about the student’s neighborhood and student’s school, so they do not directly reflect individual judgment about the student. All the data are census tract that will be measured through the student environment and area in which his or her classmates live. It also does not measure the factors that indicate race and ethnicity. 

How do these factors will be weighted in the Score?

All the factors are equally weighted during calculation that will produce a score between 1 to 100. And the student who scores 50 or above has a disadvantage and means he or she has faced more adversity. A score of 50 means a student has average adversity, and they have an average disadvantage where students who have a score below 50 is a privilege, and students have a fair advantage over others.