Schools

Manasquan SAT Scores Released In 2022: See How Students Fared

Patch compiled the combined math and reading SAT scores of school districts across New Jersey. See how Manasquan fared:

MANASQUAN, NJ - How well do Manasquan School District students rank on the SAT compared to students elsewhere in the state?

Better than most, according to new data released by the New Jersey Department of Education.

The SAT is still considered the primary standardized test that judges a student's college qualifications. And even in the middle of a pandemic, they play an important role for New Jersey seniors who are already looking at colleges – even as testing has been delayed, or centers were closed because of the coronavirus in 2020 and 2021.

Find out what's happening in Manasquan-Belmarfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Patch compiled the combined SAT scores of districts across New Jersey, as well as the lists of scores in the two sections identified as "math" and "reading and writing."

Manasquan ranked at No. 127 of 304 districts regarding combined scores with an average score of 1,116. The district also averaged a score of 552 in math (compared to an average statewide score of 560) and 564 in reading (an average statewide score of 557).

Find out what's happening in Manasquan-Belmarfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

65 percent of Manasquan students eligible to take the SATs participated during the 2020-21 school year.

A perfect score would be a combined 1600, or 800 in each section.

The district in the state that scored the highest on the overall average combined score was Monmouth County Vocational School District with an average SAT score of 1414, average math score of 713 and average reading/writing score of 701.

The lowest-ranking district was the Asbury Park School District with a score of 782, an average math score of 387 and an average reading score of 395.

Less high school students in the Garden State took the college preparatory ACT and SAT tests in 2020-21 than in previous years, according to the annual data, with experts noting that the drop could stem from many colleges eliminating the test score requirement in college applications.

But the SAT tests as we know it may be a thing of the past, according to a report from NBC News stating that the SAT will be administered entirely online as a shorter, more comprehensive test beginning in 2023. Less than half of New Jersey high school seniors took the test in 2020-21, according to the report.

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