Lodi News-Sentinel

SAT essays, subject tests to be scrapped amid pandemic fallout

- By Teresa Watanabe

LOS ANGELES — In another sea change to the standardiz­ed testing industry, the College Board announced Tuesday that it planned to scrap the SAT subject tests and optional essay, saying the pandemic had accelerate­d the push to “reduce and simplify demands on students.”

The nation’s leading standardiz­ed testing organizati­on also said it was developing a “more flexible SAT” that would be streamline­d and delivered digitally.

“The pandemic has highlighte­d the importance of being innovative and adaptive to what lies ahead,” the College Board said in a statement. “We are committed to making the SAT a more flexible tool, and we are making substantia­l investment­s to do so.”

The changes will have little impact on students applying to the University of California, which has led the way in limiting the use of standardiz­ed testing — in particular the SAT and ACT — which critics have opposed as biased based on race, income and parent education level. UC has already eliminated requiremen­ts for subject tests and is moving to phase out the general SAT and ACT; in addition, a court order has banned their use for current high school seniors. The UC Board of Regents will meet this week to discuss a new recommenda­tion to permanentl­y eliminate standardiz­ed testing as an admission requiremen­t.

Nationwide, more than 1,000 colleges and universiti­es have dropped testing requiremen­ts. The pandemic has accelerate­d that move away from the tests, as three-fourths of U.S. colleges made them optional for admissions this year because of limited testing opportunit­ies.

“The College Board is simply acknowledg­ing the economical­ly inevitable: the number of colleges and universiti­es requiring either the SAT ‘Essay’ or Subject Tests ... was rapidly declining pre-pandemic and was essentiall­y zero in the current admissions cycle,” said Bob Schaeffer, public education director for FairTest, the National Center for Fair and Open Testing.

“As a result, registrati­on volumes for both exams were plunging. After significan­t revenue losses from multiple rounds of test cancellati­ons over the past 10 months, it made no financial sense to continue trying to market its ever-lesspopula­r products,” he said.

The College Board said the SAT subject tests could be supplanted by its AP tests, which students choose to take typically after completing a collegelev­el course in subjects ranging from chemistry to history during high school. The testing organizati­on said the “expanded reach of AP and its widespread availabili­ty for low-income students and students of color” meant the subject tests were no longer necessary.

“AP provides students rich and varied opportunit­ies to showcase their knowledge and skills through college-level coursework,” the College Board said. “Courses like AP Computer Science Principles ... provide the type of hands-on learning experience­s and practical, real-world work that colleges want to see from students.”

The College Board also said there were other ways students could demonstrat­e their mastery of essay writing but that the general SAT would continue to measure writing and editing skills.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES ?? SAT test preparatio­n books sit on a shelf at a Barnes and Noble store June 27, 2002 in New York City. The College Board has announced it planned to scrap the SAT subject tests and optional essays.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES SAT test preparatio­n books sit on a shelf at a Barnes and Noble store June 27, 2002 in New York City. The College Board has announced it planned to scrap the SAT subject tests and optional essays.

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