Racial Differences in Test Preparation Strategies
A comment on Claudia Buchmann, Dennis Condron and Vincent Roscigno’s “Shadow
Education, American Style: Test Preparation, the SAT and College Enrollment”
Sigal Alon, Tel-Aviv University
Racial Differences in Test Preparation Strategies
Claudia Buchmann, Dennis Condron and Vincent Roscigno’s study, titled “Shadow
Education, American Style: Test Preparation, the SAT and College Enrollment,”
demonstrates that vigorous use of expensive test preparation tools, such as private
classes and tutors, signiicantly boosts scores on standardized exams such as the SAT
or ACT. his preparation, in turn, promotes access to more selective institutions.
Because access to preparation varies according to social class, it turned out to be a key
lever in the social transmission of privilege. One of the noteworthy indings in the
BCR study is the racial and ethnic diferences in the use of test preparation: blacks
and Hispanics are more likely than whites from comparable backgrounds to utilize
test preparation. he black-white gap is especially pronounced in the use of high
school courses, private courses and private tutors. he Hispanic-white gap is more
modest, and is limited to the use of private tutors.
he black-white gap in test prep is surprising given blacks’ lower levels of
social and inancial capital and the well-documented test score gap. In 2006, for
example, the black-white test score gap was about 200 points, a decline from a
gap of 250 points three decades ago (he College Board 2006). Consequently, in
this comment, I wish to delve into the black-white variation in test preparation
strategies in order to better understand its patterns and consider its relation to
the edge black applicants receive in admissions at selective colleges and universi-
ties with airmative action policies. My main objective is to outline a theoretical
framework that will shed light on the racial and ethnic disparity in test prepara-
tion. In the interest of parsimony, I focus here on the pronounced black-white
diferences, yet the data indicates that the patterns for Hispanics and Asians
are similar to those for blacks and whites, respectively, which strengthens the
generalizability and relevance of the proposed framework.
he analytical strategy I use conforms to the BCR study in terms of the
dataset, multiple imputation, analytical weight, and sample.
1
Like BCR I use
an indicator of highest-level test preparation but also constructed a variable
that counts multiple test preparation activities. Unlike BCR, a distinction is
made between private (private courses and tutors) and public (books, videos,
software and high school courses) types of test preparation. his distinction is
theoretically important because private preparation is not only more efective
I am grateful to Yitchak Haberfeld and Stephen L. Morgan for valuable comments on an earlier
draft.Direct correspondence to Sigal Alon, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv
University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel. E-mail: salon1@post.tau.ac.il.
© The University of North Carolina Press Social Forces 89(2) ***–***, December 2010