The New SAT: More Accessibility for Low-Income Students
On January 25th, the College Board announced that the SAT® Suite of Assessments will transition to a shorter online version. Priscilla Rodriguez, the Vice President of College Readiness Assessments at College Board, stated, “The digital SAT will be easier to take, easier to give, and more relevant… We’re not simply putting the current SAT on a digital platform—we’re taking full advantage of what delivering an assessment digitally makes possible.”
The overall test will be shorter; the new digital version will last two hours as opposed to three, and students will be given more time per question. The reading portion will change to reflect a wider range of topics to better represent the works students read in college and the sections will include shorter passages with one question per passage. The math portion will change to allow the use of a calculator on all sections. Because of its digital format, educators and students will receive their scores back in a matter of days rather than weeks.
This new format hopes to make the SAT—and college admissions by extension—more accessible. The College Board recognizes the inequities in access to technology and works to address this by providing schools with devices to students that need them. Students can choose between their own device, a school issued device, or a college board issued device. The test is also designed to save progress and time remaining if the students happen to lose connection. The online format also makes the tests easier to schedule during the school day, making it more available to low-income students.
Ronné Turner, Vice Provost for Admissions & Financial Aid at Washington University in St. Louis, said “It’s encouraging to see the positive feedback from students and educators who participated in the pilots for the digital SAT. The changes to the test are timely and clearly centered around improving the student experience.” Students who participated in the November global pilot of the new digital format were cited saying the testing experience was less stressful and the questions easier to pay attention to. Administrators were cited saying the new format was either easier or the same to proctor, and educators will no longer have to worry about packaging, sorting, or shipping testing materials.
When colleges went test optional during the pandemic, millions of students still took the SAT, and that trend continues with the class of 2022. Most students are interested in their scores and want the option to submit their scores to college admissions. Rodriguez explains, “In a largely test-optional world, the SAT is a lower-stakes test in college admissions. Submitting a score is optional for every type of college, and we want the SAT to be the best possible option for students. The SAT allows every student—regardless of where they go to high school—to be seen and to access opportunities that will shape their lives and careers.”
SAT scores are a way for students demonstrate what they know in a time where the share of students graduating high school with an A average has grown from 39% in 1998 to 55% in 2021 and other parts of college applications, including clubs, sports, and academic activities, often are costly and inaccessible for many families. In the class of 2020, 1.7 million U.S. students had SAT scores that confirmed or exceeded their high school GPA. More than 300,000 of those students were from small towns and rural communities, 600,000 were first-generation college goers, and 700,000 were Black or Latino.
The new SAT format will be delivered internationally beginning in 2023 and in the U.S. in 2024.
By Emma Streb
College Board. (2022, January 25). Digital SAT Brings Student-Friendly Changes to Test Experience [press release]. https://newsroom.collegeboard.org/digital-sat-brings-student-friendly-changes-test-experience














