6 ID, Please: A Case of SAT Fraud
Elaine Ngo; Susanne van Beelen; Jyoti Samra; and Parteek Maroke
Great Neck North High School and Sam Eshagoff
John L. Miller Great Neck North high school, also known as Great Neck North High School, is a public high school located in Long Island, New York (Bennington Banner, 2011). It is known as a school of high achievers that sends almost all its students to college. The student body is predominantly white (69%), with significant Asian (20%) and Hispanic (7%) populations. About 25% of students are classified as “economically disadvantaged” (New York State Education Department, 2023). Despite some economic diversity, Great Neck is generally known as a wealthy community (Bennington Banner, 2011). Great Neck North’s reputation as a high-achieving school creates an intense academic environment: with most students aiming for top colleges, there is significant pressure to excel academically and on standardized tests like the SAT.Sam Eshagoff, a 2010 graduate of Great Neck North, was a 19-year-old known for being a smart, accomplished student. He also had a reputation for his high SAT scores. In 2011, Sam was enrolled at Emory University in Atlanta after completing his freshman year at the University of Michigan (Solnik, 2011). His stellar academic record resulted in him running a scheme where he took the SAT for sixteen students over the course of three years.
A struggling student approached Sam, saying “Yo, you’re good on your SATs and I’m not,” and simply asked how much it would take for him to take the SAT on his behalf (CBS News, 2012). After his first attempt he realized how easy it was to cheat the system. For Eshagoff it was a quick and easy way to make money, and this one favor soon turned into a continuous cheating operation.
Eshagoff forged high school IDs by altering the picture with his own and changing the name and date of birth to match his clients. For female students, he would only agree if they had a unisex name, to reduce the risk of getting caught (CBS News, 2012). To avoid any suspicion Eshagoff deliberately went to test centers where he knew he would not be recognized (CBS News, 2012). His clientele expanded through word of mouth and referrals, and he charged between $1,500 and $2,500 per test (Solnik, 2011). Eshagoff repeatedly scored in the 97th percentile or higher for his client, and believed that by securing high scores, he was giving these students a “new lease on life”, a path to better universities, new careers, and transformed futures (CBS News, 2012).
The SAT
The Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is an exam that many universities based in the United States, Australia, Canada, India, and many other countries refer to when determining the acceptance of new students into their institutions. The College Board is responsible for determining the structure, administration, and application of the SAT in the United States, while the Educational Testing Service (ETS) develops, administers, publishes, and scores the exam (Knox, 2024). The paper-based exam, which is the version that Eshagoff took, consisted of a reading, a writing, and a math section, though at the end of 2023, the paper-based exam was replaced with a digital version of the exam, which has two sections for reading, writing, and math (Manjunath, 2024).Despite the dependence that many universities have on the SAT scores, it has been the target of criticism. Critics state that the SAT does not provide an adequate measurement of a student’s success rate in college or university. There is also evidence suggesting a correlation between the income of a student’s family and their scores on the exam (The JBHE Foundation, Inc, 2009).
Investigations
Aftermath
Discussion Questions
- What should the punishments have been for the students caught paying others to complete the SATs for them?
- Eshagoff received community service as part of his plea deal and was required to tutor low-income students on SAT exams. Do you believe this was justified?
- How should educational institutions balance student privacy rights with the need for academic integrity?
- Should universities rely on standardized test scores to determine who gets accepted into their institutions? Why or why not?
- Do you agree with Eshagoff that he was giving his clients “a new lease on life” and potentially saving their lives?
- What are some additional policy changes you would make for standardized test administration?
References
Anderson, J., & Applebome, P. (2011). Exam Cheating on Long Island Hardly a Secret. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/education/on-long-island-sat-cheating-was-hardly-a-secret.html
CBS Interactive. (2012, January 1). The perfect score: Cheating on the SAT. CBS News. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/the-perfect-score-cheating-on-the-sat/
Manjunath, L. (2024). Purpose of the SAT Exam: Why It Matters for College Admissions.LeapScholar. https://leapscholar.com/blog/purpose-of-sat-exam-top-5-advantages-benefits-of-giving-test-in-2022/
Solnik, C. (2011, September 27). 7 charged in Long Island sat cheating scandal. Long Island Business News. https://libn.com/2011/09/27/7-charged-in-great-neck-north-sat-cheating-scandal/
The JBHE Foundation, Inc. (2009). The Persisting Racial Chasm in Scores on the SAT College Entrance Examination. The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, pp. 84-89. https://www.jstor.org/stable/40407552
Bennington Banner. (2011). 20 students accused in college exam scandal on Long Island. Bennington Banner. https://www.benningtonbanner.com/local-news/20-students-accused-in-college-exam-scandal-on-long-island/article_be2fe746-d592-5b1f-bec4-
49f524b9532b.html
New York State Education Department GREAT NECK NORTH HIGH SCHOOL – Enrollment Data.https://data.nysed.gov/enrollment.php?year=2023&instid=800000049054
Edelman, S. (2019, March 17). Ex-nassau county DA who uncovered sat cheating calls for College Board overhaul. New York Post. https://nypost.com/2019/03/16/ex-nassau-county-da-who-uncovered-sat-cheating-calls-for-college-board-overhaul/
TodayShow. (2012, January 4). Honest students “taking back seat” to Sat Cheats, DA says. TODAY.com. https://www.today.com/video/honest-students-taking-back-seat-to-sat- cheats-da-says-44489795528
CBS Interactive. (2011). 7 arrested for alleged sat cheating ring at Great Neck North High School. CBS News. https://www.cbsnews.com/newyork/news/7-arrested-for-alleged-sat-cheating-ring-at- great-neck-north-high-school/
ABC30. (2012, March 27). New security measures in wake of sat cheating scandal on Long Island: ABC30 Fresno. ABC30 Fresno. https://abc30.com/archive/8596898/
Knox, L. (2024, June 18). Massive downsizing at ETS, Legacy Assessment Company. Inside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs. https://www.insidehighered.com/news/admissions/graduate/2024/06/18/massive-downsizing-ets-legacy-assessment-company