The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 15, 1979-Page 3 Coaching courses claim to boost scores By SARA ANSPACH Tuition fees range from $200 to more than $500, the course work can be grueling, and the benefits are, at best, uncertain. But each year 300,000 students enroll in private "coaching schools" - profitable enterprises that claim the ability to boost their pupils' scores on standardized admissions tests. Coaching courses are offered by many agencies across the country for nearly every standardized test. The Stanley H. Kaplan Center, the largest coaching school with 80 centers throughout the United States, of- fers preparation courses for a great number of testing acronyms including the SAT, LSAT, MCAT, GMAT, PSAT/NMSOT. GRE. MAT. DAT. OCAT. VAT, and the PCAT. THE RELATIVE SUCCESS of "coaching" for a test designed to measure a-student's aptitude rather than achievement in certain subject areas, has been con- tinually subject to controversy. The Educational Testing Service (ETS), parent of many tests, claims significant point gains cannot be obtained by attending a 'cram' course. ETS's stance, however, is disputed by numerous par- ties, including many of the students who take these courses every year. Kaplan advertisements boast that 70 per cent of their new enrollees act upon the recom- mendations of former students, and other preparation services make similar claims. Most coaching schools keep records of how well students do on tests after they 'graduate' from a cour- se. Kaplan ads claim there is an average increase of 50 to 100 points for test repeaters. University LSAT Preparation Service, a school based in Livonia, Michigan, says the median score for the school's students on the LSAT (Law School Admissions Test) is 652, and those repeating- the test after taking their course, gain an average of 72 points. John Sexton's LSAT Preparation Center claims "many" of their pupils' scores have jumped more than 250 points. THESE STARK DIFFERENCES between the school's advertising claims and the ETS's traditional position prompted the Federal Trade Commission See PRIVATE, Page 14 Newcomers find out how to cope with the big 'U' By TIM YAGLE The short period between high school graduation and most students' first day on a college campus leaves little time to adjust to the competitive University environment. In an annual program that began last Sunday and continues until Aug. 10, University Orientation Director Dr. Donald Perigo and his staff are trying to make that rough psychological tran- sition a little easier to-handle for some 4,800 freshpersons and transfer studen- ts. PERIGO SAYS the goal of the Sum- mer Orientation program is "to allow them (new students) an opportunity to experience campus life and to meet other new students with common con- cerns. We know what their concerns are and we're trying to address them." According to Perigo, the groups of students who come to campus in three- day intervals (transfer students stay only two because they don't take any tests) have a set itinerary for attending seminars on college life, and how to study and budget one's time. They meet with faculty advisors from each of the 17 University colleges. Academic coun- selors help to map out the students' curriculum and inform them of degree requirements. Students view films and slide shows on the myriad of student organizations they may want to join. Freshpersons also face a barrage of writing and foreign language tests for placement in and out of courses. See FRESHPERSONS, Page 12 Daily Photo By HJiMKR Z SOPHOMORE CRAIG PERNICK (left) explains the academic maze at the University to two friends, Sheryl Baum (seated) and Gary Epstein (right), who will attend the University next Fall as freshpersons. Baum and Epstein are among the some 4,800 freshpersons who will sample University life during orientation this summer. Court considers By BETH PERSKY equally in sc The "Black English" case, the first of barrier. ACCORDIIS its type in the country, completed its torney, Gabe initial week of deliberations in a U.S. are either "e District Court in Detroit yesterday. anger The suit, filed against the Ann'Arbor danger of b Board of Education in 1977, alleges that stigmatizedt 11 children from the Green Housing talk." Project near North Campus who attend t Kamowitz the city's Martin Luther King, Jr. the children i Elementary School, are not treated case as race, dling the cas( today Uppers and Adolph Hitler A Minnesota psychiatrist has concluded that Adolph Hitler was hooked on uppers during World War II. Dr, Leonard Heston said he began resear- ching Hitler's behavior in 1972 after he became fascinated with a book's description of Hitler. The book, written by Hitler's personal architect and minister Albert Speer, noted that Hitler's left hand began to shake shortly after the start of World War II. The tremor spread to his left leg, right hand, and right leg. Then the Fuehrer began to chew on his fingers. 'Heston said microfilm copies of Hitler's medical records indicate that the German leader suffered from stomach cramps, and that his doctor prescribed amphetamines, which were new on the market. Heston said Hitler liked the speed because he believed the pills kept him at his mental peak. Tip-toeing over the yellow brick road Whengmost Michiganians think of the city of 'Black English' case hool because of a language everything out except the language barrier." NG TO the plaintiffs' at- . Wednesday the 11 young plaintiffs Kamowitz, the children and one other child from the housing unctionally illiterate or in project, testified before the court, and ecoming so - they are attracted a great deal of media atten because of the way they tion. "I'M UNAWARE of any educational said the poverty-level of trial that has generated as much media s as critical a factor in the interest," said defense attorney John , but that the judge han- Weaver. e, Charles Joiner, "threw See BLACK, Page 14 Holland, they envision the cascades of multi-colored tulips for which the western Michigan town is famous. But for 1,000 members of the International Wizard of Oz Club, Holland is paved with yellow brick roads. The Oz fans are expected to gather in Holland beginning today for their 10th annual meeting, organizers said yesterday. There also is a rumour circulating that actress Margaret Hamilton, who immortalized the Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 version of The Wizard of Oz, will greet the Oz fans. Hamilton has spent the last several years pushing Maxwell House coffee on TV commericals. The death of Tin Man Jack Haley, however, may dampen the spirit of the gathering. Happenings ... are laid-back today as the last full week of classes for Spring Term ends. International folk dancers will invade the Liberty Plaza at 7:30 p.m. ... the Canterbury Loft presents Michael Garcia, "Night Writings: Prose and Poetry Reading," at 332 S. State St., 8 p.m.... FILMS: Ann Arbor Public Library-The Spy Who Came In From the Cold, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., at the library's Meeting Room ... Ann Arbor Film Co-op-Origin of the Species: Punk and ProtoPunk, 7 p.m. and 10:20 p.m.; Island of Lost Souls, 8:40 p.m., both in Aud. 4, MLB.. Cinema II-Conrack, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall... Cinema Guild-Cooley High, 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., Old A & D Aud. On the outside. . Well, it'll be warmer again today. Actually, you could say it'll be hot. If you lived in Death Valley, though, you might consider it- a cold snap. On the other hand, if you lived inside the Arctic Circle, these temperatures would be unheard of. But in Ann Arbor, the high temperature will be near 80'. Well, it'll be more like the mid-80s. It will be sunny, too. Expect the low to be a mild 60'. J