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State Scholarship Limits Eased

Michigan among places where bar is lower for National Merit awards.
by Fredreka Schouten, Detroit News, February 8, 2004
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Want to improve your kid’s chances of winning a prestigious National Merit award? Move to Mississippi. Or Arkansas. Or maybe even Michigan.

Students in those states can earn much lower scores on the qualifying test than students in other states and still become semifinalists. Their peers in New York, Maryland and New Jersey can post higher scores and still lose out on the prizes.

If the scholarship program used a single cutoff score for the nation, hundreds of additional students in California and the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic would win the coveted semifinalist designation.

“This practice is incredibly little known, although it has existed for half a century,” said Walt Haney, a testing expert at Boston College.

To ensure geographic diversity, the number of National Merit semifinalists in each state is based on that state’s share of the national population of graduating high school seniors. States with a larger share of high-achieving students have higher qualifying scores than other states and that keeps them from dominating the prizes.

In Michigan in 2001, the year studied, the qualifying score was 209. By contrast, the qualifying score in New York was 217. In Massachusetts it was 221.

Michigan had 575 actual semifinalists. Using a national, uniform cutoff score, however, and the number shrinks to 395.

“Kids who are semifinalists in some states would be also-rans in other states,” said Delabian Rice-Thurston, an independent researcher who uncovered state-by-state data on the National Merit scoring gap.

“We ought to know the reason why some students can be so much more competitive on these tests,” she said.

The National Merit Scholarship Corporation, a nonprofit group created in 1955, sponsors one of the nation’s most highly regarded academic competitions. It helps to dole out more than $30 million in privately funded scholarships to college-bound students each year.

The semifinalist designation is important to schools and students. High schools proudly tout the number of semifinalists they produce each year, and college admissions officers pay close attention to the awards. Most go on to be finalists, and more than half of finalists win scholarship money from the National Merit program, corporations and colleges.

The program, based in Evanston, Ill., uses the Preliminary SAT — taken by more than 1 million high school students annually — as the qualifying exam.

Each year, 16,000 top-scoring public and private school students become semifinalists. The maximum score on the PSAT is 240.

But semifinalist scores vary widely. Students in Maryland had to score at least 220 and New Jersey students had to score at least 219 to become semifinalists in 2001, the year that Rice-Thurston studied.

Students in Mississippi needed to score only 200. In South Dakota, the cutoff score was 202.

Had the program used a uniform cutoff score for the nation, the semifinalist picture would have been very different that year.

The number of New York students earning the semifinalist designation would have jumped from 984 to 1,407. Massachusetts, Maryland, California and New Jersey would have seen the number of National Merit winners in their states increase by more than 300.

“Counselors are aware of it,” Marjorie Jacobs, who oversees the guidance program at Scarsdale High School in New York, said of the disparities. The school traditionally does well in the competition.

“We have to be philosophical about it,” Jacobs said. “It would be nice if all our students could get it (semifinalist designation), but I do have a sensitivity to students who may not have the advantages that our students have.”

There’s little chance the current system for doling out National Merit awards will change.

The goal was “to make this truly a national program so students all across the nation can aspire to become a National Merit semifinalist,” said Elaine Detweiler, a spokeswoman for the program.

Rice-Thurston’s report found that states with the highest scores also tend to have higher per-pupil spending levels, larger teacher salaries and higher proportions of public school teachers with advanced degrees.

    

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