There’s no place like home for test-takers
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Deirdre Newman
Stress is to taking the SAT in another county as comfort is to a
familiar environment.
This analogy played itself out over the past week as hundreds of
Newport Harbor High students, who thought they might have to venture
all the way to Los Angeles to take the dreaded Scholastic Aptitude
Test, found out they could take it at their own school after all --
albeit a month later than they intended.
The resolution capped a week of nail-biting, with officials at
Educational Testing Service -- the company that coordinates SAT
testing -- and Newport Harbor High School administrators blamed each
other for the snafu.
Eventually, a staff member at the school volunteered to coordinate
the testing, sending waves of relief throughout the Newport Harbor
High community.
“Kids in this area want to go to their home school because they’re
more comfortable,” parent Bob Glassic said. “If you send them to
downtown L.A., they will be scared to death that their cars will be
broken into. Putting them into a whole different community, you’re
changing the whole atmosphere.”
The mix-up became apparent last weekend when parents of the 385
students who registered online in August to take the
college-admissions test at Newport Harbor on Oct. 12 received a
letter from the testing service informing them the school would not
be a testing facility. Instead, their children were directed to go to
Locke High School in Los Angeles.
The previous testing coordinator, who left the school last year,
contacted Education Testing Service in March and let them know it
would no longer be hosting the test, assistant principal Kathy
Slawson said. But service officials claim that the school canceled at
the last minute, causing them to scramble to find a location for the
300-plus students, spokesman Kevin Gonzalez said. Finally, they came
up with Locke.
After they received notice -- a mere two weeks before the
scheduled testing date -- some livid parents, such as Glassic,
subjected the testing service to a barrage of phone calls. They were
able to get their children transferred to Corona del Mar High School
for next week’s testing date.
But that still left more than 300 SAT-takers stuck in Los Angeles.
So, for the past few days, school officials tried to work with the
service to have them send a coordinator, Slawson said. The school
made a concerted effort to find a replacement for the previous
coordinator, but no one jumped at the opportunity, Slawson added.
“There were multiple tries that went out to faculty, classified
and certificated staff, and the situation was that [the service] pays
very little and [they have] not been willing to increase the amount
of pay for the large number of hours that people have to coordinate
all of this and proctor it,” Slawson said.
The company pays a supervisor of 385 students $270, a test
administrator $82 and a proctor $67 for about a five-hour period,
Gonzalez said.
Finally, on Thursday, a staff member volunteered to coordinate
testing for the school, said Peggy Anatol, Newport-Mesa Unified’s
director of assessment.
Now, the service is offering a free transfer from the October
testing date to the November testing date at Newport Harbor High, so
students can be more at ease taking the grueling test at their own
school.
Glassic, who teaches part time at Chapman University, said there
are probably a lot of retired teachers in the area who would be
interesting in helping out with the testing at Newport Harbor.
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