Computer-based SAT and PSAT coming next year
Colorado high school students will continue to take the SAT and PSAT as the state’s way of measuring school and district academic performance, but they’ll switch to the computerized version in spring 2024.
A committee of teachers and school administrators recommended the College Board’s online suite of tests to replace its paper version, according to the Colorado Department of Education. The new computerized test was piloted by the College Board in 2021, and the organization said in a news release last year that it’s “easier to give, and more relevant.”
State law requires the state education department to take competitive bids every five years for a statewide assessment. The selection, however, was delayed a year because of the pandemic.
Colorado public colleges and universities no longer require a college-level exam like the SAT or ACT for acceptance, part of a growing “test optional” movement nationwide.
However, many colleges and universities still ask for test scores as part of their application, and even students applying to test- optional schools can submit their scores to show their qualifications.
Colorado began using the PSAT and SAT to measure students’ math and English abilities in 2017, part of a compromise to reduce the overall number of tests students take in school.
The idea was to use a test high school students would want to take anyway because it would help with their college and scholarship applications. Ninthand 10th-graders take the PSAT, and high school juniors take the SAT in the spring.
Colorado uses the test results along with graduation rates and other factors to rate the performance of schools and districts.
SAT scores also are one way students can show they meet graduation requirements for basic competency in math and language arts.