Given the size and influence of the California system, whose marquee schools include the UCLA and the UC Berkeley, the move is expected to accelerate colleges away from the tests, amid charges that they are unfair to poor and minority students
Students at the University of California, Berkeley, on Sept. 21, 2017. In a debate with major implications for the future of standardized testing, leaders at the University of California are expected to decide Thursday, March21, 2020, whether to effectively eliminate the SAT and ACT as requirements for admission at the system’s 10 schools, which are some of the most popular in the country. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The University of California on Thursday voted to phase out the SAT and ACT as requirements to apply to its system of 10 schools, which include some of the nation’s most popular campuses, in a decision with major implications for the use of standardized tests in college admissions.
Given the size and influence of the California system, whose marquee schools include the University of California, Los Angeles, and the University of California, Berkeley, the move is expected to accelerate the momentum of U.S. colleges away from the tests, amid charges that they are unfair to poor, black and Hispanic students.
The school system’s action, which follows many small liberal arts colleges, comes as the ACT and the College Board, a nonprofit organization that administers the SAT, are suffering financially from the cancellation of test dates during the coronavirus pandemic. One critic of the industry estimated that the College Board had lost $45 million in revenue this spring.
Although many students will most likely continue to take the exams as long as they are required by competitive schools like Stanford and those in the Ivy League, California’s decision will be a blow to the image of the tests, and experts said it could tip the balance for other schools in deciding whether to eliminate them.
“The University of California is one of the best institutions in the world, so whatever decision they make will be extraordinarily influential,” said Terry W. Hartle, senior vice president at the American Council on Education, a trade group. “Whatever UC does will have ripple effects across American higher education, particularly at leading public universities.”
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