
![]() |
Now that the city has a skating rink, do you plan to use it? |

You probably remember the day you took the ACT or SAT.
Feeling nervous and tired from a night of studying, you showed up at the testing place, dreading what the next few hours of your life would hold. After all that preparation and hype, there you were.
And given how you performed that day, you may also have feared how your parents would react after seeing your score. You may have even tried to get home before them to intercept the mail.
Yes, the ACT and SAT are probably not every NIU student’s favorite acronyms.
But over the last decade, scores from these standardized tests have become more important in the decision-making process for undergraduate admissions, according to a report by the National Association for College Admission Counseling (NACAC).
Alan Clemens, instructor of leadership, educational psychology and foundations, said he thinks that rather than placing more importance on standardized test scores, admissions departments should rely on a “portfolio” of items so that applicants are judged on a “broad-based analysis of what they can do.” But he said that interviews with potential students, whenever possible, should be seen as an important tool.
“The more you can do to know people as individuals, the more you can make a decision about their potential,” he said.

![]() |
Now that the city has a skating rink, do you plan to use it? |