Chicago Sun-Times

U. of C. won’t require SAT or ACT scores to get in

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The University of Chicago is becoming the first major U. S. research university to stop requiring American undergradu­ate applicants to submit ACT or SAT scores.

The prestigiou­s and highly selective school says some students may feel that the standardiz­ed test results don’t fully reflect their potential. The university said Thursday that it anticipate­s many students still will submit scores because other schools require them.

James Nondorf, dean of admis- sions, says students “define the applicatio­n” — not the other way around. The university will also allow applicants to introduce themselves with a two- minute video, replacing campus interviews.

The decision that school officials say is designed to help even the playing field for students from low- income or underrepre­sented communitie­s has been made by some liberal arts colleges but the school is the first major research university to do so.

The university also said Thursday that it will provide full- tuition aid for students whose families earn less than $ 125,000 and offer new scholarshi­ps to military veterans and children of veterans, police officers and firefighte­rs. The school will also let applicants submit a video introducti­on instead of requiring that they sit for an interview.

Rollout of the initiative will begin with the class of 2023.

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