Study Abroad: Yale University to bring back SAT, ACT for UG admission
Ayushi Bisht | February 23, 2024 | 11:51 AM IST | 2 mins read
Yale University UG Admission: The university will accept standardised test scores for admission from year 2025 for UG courses.
NEW DELHI: Yale University has announced to bring back Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) and American College Testing (ACT) as the eligibility criteria for undergraduate admission. The university will accept standardised test scores for admission from year 2025 for UG courses.
The university will begin the change in the fall and will also accept scores from Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate exams as an alternative to the SAT or ACT. With this decision, Yale University has become the second Ivy League university after Dartmouth to ditch test-optional policies that were widely accepted during the pandemic.
"Yale will again require students to include scores with their applications. But, for the first time, Yale will allow applicants to report Advanced Placement (AP) or International Baccalaureate (IB) exam scores in lieu of the ACT or SAT," the university said in a statement.
Yale said its policy would be “test flexible,” allowing students to submit scores from subject-based Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate tests as alternatives of SAT or ACT scores.
Also read Ashok Gehlot demands immediate release of Rajiv Gandhi Scholarship for students studying abroad
Admissions officers examined all of the applications they received this year and gave more weight to certain sections of the application than to others. But as the institution noted, this change frequently served the "disadvantage of applicants from lower socio-economic backgrounds". The admissions round now in progress will not impact applicants based on Yale's decision.
Dartmouth College made a similar announcement in February. Hundreds of students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds who had strong SAT scores—in the 1,400 range—had declined to turn them in because they thought their scores were too close to the ideal 1,600, according to Dartmouth, located in Hanover, New Hampshire.
As per NYT, the group FairTest, which has opposed standardised testing claims that over 80% of four-year colleges—or at least 1,825 of the universities in the US that award bachelor degrees will not require SAT or ACT results. The SAT test was taken by 1.7 million students in 2022, a decline from 2.2 million in 2020.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- ‘Bitter experience’: DU’s 4th-year students face sudden rule changes, limited options, teacher shortage
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Private medical college sues for institute-level admissions, NRI quota expansion
- Maharashtra NEET Counselling: Medical college ‘confined, forced’ him to retract fee complaint, says aspirant
- MahaDBT, CAP Integration: Maharashtra students to get scholarship approvals at admission, no renewals needed
- Maharashtra: 11,000 faculty posts lie vacant; Officials say governors, finance division at fault
- BTech Courses: AI, computer science fuel enrolment boom to 5-year high, but may soon kill jobs, say experts
- Lights fade at Calcutta University’s unique Department of Applied Optics and Photonics due to staff shortage
- CBSE Board Exam 2026: Two exams for Class 10 ‘exhausting’ for teachers, cause more anxiety for students
- In poll-bound Bihar, NEP is leaving university students with endless exams, but no results or classes
- Agriculture courses in enrolment crisis: 10 Maharashtra colleges shut, over half seats vacant in 44 institutes