College Board and ACT: Should Big Test remain as gatekeeper of higher education?

Colleges are increasingly making standardized tests optional for applicants, leading to questions about whether or not the companies profiting from broad-based testing should be the de facto gatekeepers of the higher education admissions system.

“The test prep industry has become a multi-billion dollar industry, and it's growing and expanding at a high rate,” Susan Paterno, a professor of English and director of the journalism program at Chapman University and previously served on a college admissions board, told Yahoo Finance. “As more and more kids take these high-stakes tests and enroll in these test prep programs, the competition to get into selective colleges just shoots through the roof, and the competition to win merit scholarships reaches a fever pitch."

The number of spots at quality colleges each year are finite, so the stakes are high: In 2019, authorities announced charges related to an alleged conspiracy that involved parents of aspiring undergraduate students collectively paying more than $25 million to a middleman who secured student-athlete placements at highly selective U.S. universities. The scandal became national news (and a Netflix documentary) as several high profile parents and universities were shown to be involved in the scheme.

(Source: Netflix)
(Source: Netflix)

“If these are the hoops that middle-class and affluent kids have to jump through, imagine what it's like for kids coming out of underfunded, poorly resourced high schools,” said Paterno, who authored a forthcoming book titled "Game On: Why College Admissions is Rigged." “It's terrible... it requires an entire systemic change.”

Shifts are occurring: More than 1,500 accredited U.S. four-year colleges and universities will not require students applying for fall 2022 admission to submit ACT/SAT scores, according to the educational advocacy organization FairTest, meaning that two-thirds of all bachelor-degree institutions in the country will be test-optional.

“Test-optional and test-blind/score-free policies have become the ‘new normal’ in undergraduate admission,” FairTest Executive Director Bob Schaeffer stated. “Higher education leaders recognize that removing ACT/SAT requirements promotes both academic excellence and equity.”

"The College Board supports colleges introducing more flexibility and choice into the admissions process through test-optional policies," Priscilla Rodriguez, Vice President of College Readiness Assessments at The College Board, told Yahoo Finance in a statement. "Some students may decide their application is stronger without test scores, while others will benefit from sending them, including the many thousands of underrepresented students whose SAT scores strengthen their college applications."