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  2. What to Know About the Accuplacer Exam - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/know-accuplacer-exam-133536835.html

    The SAT is a household name and AP classes are ubiquitous. But the Accuplacer, a lesser-known suite of tests from the College Board, also plays an important role in helping gauge college readiness ...

  3. College Board - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College_Board

    The Accuplacer test is used primarily by more than 1,000 high schools and colleges [38] to determine a student's needed placement. Often community colleges have specific guidelines for students requiring the Accuplacer test. The Accuplacer Companion paper-and-pencil tests allow students with disabilities (specifically students with an ...

  4. Placement testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placement_testing

    Placement tests often involve subjects and skills that students haven't studied since elementary or middle school, and for older adults, the might be many years between high school and college. In addition, students who attach a consequence to test results and therefore take placement tests more seriously are likely to achieve higher scores. [33]

  5. Iowa Assessments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iowa_assessments

    The Iowa Assessments (previously the Iowa Test of Basic Skills and originally Iowa Every Pupil Test of Basic Skills) also known informally as the Iowa Tests, formerly known as the ITBS tests or the Iowa Basics, are standardized tests provided as a service to schools by the College of Education of the University of Iowa.

  6. ACTH stimulation test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACTH_stimulation_test

    The ACTH test (also called the cosyntropin, tetracosactide, or Synacthen test) is a medical test usually requested and interpreted by endocrinologists to assess the functioning of the adrenal glands' stress response by measuring the adrenal response to adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH; corticotropin) or another corticotropic agent such as tetracosactide (cosyntropin, tetracosactrin; Synacthen ...

  7. Genetic testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_testing

    The fluid is then tested for chromosomal abnormalities such as Down syndrome (trisomy 21) and trisomy 18, which can result in neonatal or fetal death. Test results can be retrieved within 7–14 days after the test is done. This method is 99.4% accurate at detecting and diagnosing fetal chromosome abnormalities.

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  9. Mantoux test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantoux_test

    The test was first developed and described by the German physician Felix Mendel in 1908. [2] It is named after Charles Mantoux, a French physician who built on the work of Koch and Clemens von Pirquet to create his test in 1907. However, the test was unreliable due to impurities in tuberculin which tended to cause false results. [3]