Will CSU require SAT for 2023

The largest 4-year university system in the U.S. is dropping the SAT and ACT

California State University drops SAT and ACT admission requirements for undergraduate admissions

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Students walk on the University of California, Berkeley campus in Berkeley, Calif. California State University, the country’s largest four-year university system, will eliminate SAT and ACT standardized tests from its admission requirements in a move that places California’s public universities at the forefront of a national trend to drop the exams. The CSU board of trustees unanimously approved the shift at a meeting, Wednesday, March 23, 2022, joining the University of California in adopting a “test free” admissions process.

Marcio Jose Sanchez, Associated Press

In an effort to eliminate high-stakes exams because of equity concerns, California State University, the country’s largest four-year university system, announced it is eliminating standardized tests for undergraduate admissions.

Details: The university system had already dropped standardized testing requirements, SATs and ACTs, for the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 academic years because of the pandemic.

“This decision aligns with the California State University’s continued efforts to level the playing field and provide greater access to a high-quality college degree for students from all backgrounds,” said Acting Chancellor Steve Relyea.

“In essence, we are eliminating our reliance on a high-stress, high-stakes test that has shown negligible benefit and providing our applicants with greater opportunities to demonstrate their drive, talents and potential for college success,” he explained.

Flashback: This news comes after the University of California system made the landmark decision to suspend ACT and SAT requirements for admissions through 2024 and eliminate them for California students by 2025, per The New York Times.

California State University’s 23 schools and the University of California's 10 schools collectively educate over 700,000 students.

Expects said: “Today’s decision ... sets a standard for public institutions around the country,” said Bob Schaeffer, executive director of FairTest: National Center for Fair & Open Testing, per The Los Angeles Times.

“Combined with the elimination of standardized exam mandates by the University of California system as well as test-optional policies in place at all public campuses in Oregon and Washington state, these actions make the West Coast a national model for admissions reform.”

The California State University Board of Trustees voted unanimously Wednesday to no longer use standardized SAT and ACT tests in undergraduate admissions.

That means that even if an applicant submits scores for admission to one of the system’s 23 campuses, Cal State admissions counselors won’t look at them. The system’s campuses enroll a total of 477,000 students.

“This decision aligns with the California State University’s continued efforts to level the playing field and provide greater access to a high-quality college degree for students from all backgrounds,” said acting chancellor Steve Relyea. “In essence, we are eliminating our reliance on a high-stress, high-stakes test that has shown negligible benefit and providing our applicants with greater opportunities to demonstrate their drive, talents and potential for college success.”

The move had the endorsement of the Cal State Students Association and the Academic Senate of the California State University.

The decision follows a similar vote by the University of California Board of Regents in 2020. That means that the testing companies will not do business with most students applying to public colleges in the most populous state in the country.(Some students will continue to apply to private colleges, which have a range of policies on the SAT and ACT). The University of California vote was at the beginning of the pandemic, and the Cal State vote may be at the end of it. But officials from both systems said their policies were adopted without the pandemic in mind, but instead as long-term approaches to admissions.

Robert Schaeffer, the executive director of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing (FairTest) said that the Cal State system had “set a standard for public institutions around the country. Combined with the elimination of standardized exam mandates by the University of California system as well as test-optional policies in place at all public campuses in Oregon and Washington State, these actions make the West Coast a national model for admissions reform.”

And, he said, “higher education policy makers across the country are watching closely and largely following suit. It is not an accident that so many other public systems—literally from Colorado to Maine—no longer require applicants to submit ACT or SAT scores. Test-optional admissions is now the new normal in public higher education just as it has been among liberal arts colleges.”

The ACT criticized the vote by the California State University board.

“This decision is more likely to harm than help students. Abandoning the use of objective assessments like the ACT test introduces greater subjectivity and uncertainty into the admissions process, and this decision is likely to worsen entrenched inequities in California,” the ACT said in a statement. “Troubling differentials in educational outcomes and performance appear in the same way for academic measures like high school GPA as they do for standardized exams. In fact, ACT research has shown that test-optional policies do not have the effects suggested by advocates, such as increasing the diversity of the applicant pool. The suggestion that the test offers ‘negligible additional value’ is refuted by longstanding research whose conclusions are openly embraced by many institutions, such as Harvard University. Solving the prevailing, systemic education inequities that exist in this country requires attention and focus on root causes, rather than dismissing the tools that substantially improve our understanding of them.”

The College Board did not respond to a request for comment.

The move was praised by Michele Siqueiros, president of the Campaign for College Opportunity. “A single 3-hour test on a Saturday morning has never measured a student’s full talent or potential. What these tests have measured is the unfair advantage that privileged and wealthier students have, including access to expensive test prep, which focuses on how to ‘game’ the test instead of measuring the knowledge gained by students in their high school courses.”

Other Changes

The Cal State board acted as many other colleges, public and private, were also moving away from testing requirements.

On Wednesday, Southern Methodist University, which went test optional during the pandemic, said it would remain that way for at least another year, for students who apply for fall 2023 and spring 2024 admission.

“Since implementing a temporary test-optional policy in 2020, the admission committee continues to attract high-achieving students who bring great talent to our campus,” said Wes Waggoner, SMU associate vice president for enrollment management.

And in Georgia, the Board of Regents recently announced that 23 of its institutions (all except the Georgia College & State University, the Georgia Institute of Technology, and the University of Georgia) may evaluate fall 2022 applicants without the consideration of SAT/ACT scores.

That has already prompted colleges to start to drop SAT/ACT requirements—Georgia Southern University announced that no SAT or ACT scores were necessary. Valdosta State University announced that students who have a high-school grade point average of 3.2 or higher no longer need to submit scores.

Ryan Hogan, director of admissions at VSU, said the goal is to help remove some of the barriers incoming freshmen have been facing since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. “This latest update to our admissions process will certainly expand our ability to grow our dynamic and diverse community by eliminating additional costs and test score anxiety for this select group of hardworking students,” said Hogan.

Does CSU require SAT for Class of 2023?

​​The California State University (CSU) no longer uses ACT or SAT examinations in determining admission eligibility for all CSU campuses.

Will SAT be required for fall 2023?

According to FairTest, more than 1,750 schools will have ACT/SAT-optional policies in place for fall 2023, meaning that applicants can choose whether to submit test scores and have them be considered in a college's admissions process.

Does Cal Poly require SAT Fall 2023?

The California State University (CSU) system has permanently suspended the use of ACT/SAT tests in the admissions process. Standardized test scores will only be used for Math and English placement purposes, if you are admitted. College Board institution codes for Cal Poly SLO: (ACT: 0188) (SAT: 4038) (AP: 4038).

Does SJSU require SAT 2023?

For the Fall 2023 admission cycle, SJSU will not consider SAT/ACT scores in our review for admission. Freshman applicants who meet the CSU minimum academic requirements will be ranked in each major and admitted to meet the enrollment capacity of their chosen major.