Is Yale SAT optional 2023?

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Is Yale SAT optional 2023?

When the pandemic began, nearly all colleges and universities in the United States dropped their testing requirements when it became impossible for students in some areas of the country to find a test center and date reliably. Then, as the pandemic continued, many colleges extended their policies for another year or longer. Initially, however, it seemed like the Ivy League was eager to return to requiring test scores.

Then, in December 2021, Harvard University shook the testing and college admissions world by declaring that they would not require applicants to submit SAT or ACT scores through the next four years (that is, through the high school Class of 2025). Meanwhile, a few other Ivy League schools (including Cornell University and Stanford University) had already extended their test-optional policies through 2023.

What Prompted this Change?

Well, for one thing, the number of applications to top colleges shot up once the testing requirement disappeared. Given that universities are always eager to increase their selectivity, this was a boon to schools like Harvard and Yale, where acceptance rates had plateaued or even ticked up prior to the pandemic. Without the SAT/ACT requirement, however, acceptance rates at these top colleges managed to sink even lower, to 4% or even 3%.

Meanwhile, college admissions offices are paying more attention to equity than ever before and have begun to take claims against standardized testing increasingly seriously, especially evidence suggesting that these tests are unfair to low-income, minority, and other historically marginalized students. Their argument is: if we can successfully evaluate students without the test, why not do so?

Will More Schools Follow Harvard’s Lead?

It’s important to remember that reports of the SAT’s impending demise have oft been overstated; when the University of Chicago dropped their SAT/ACT requirement back in 2018, many thought similarly selective schools would immediately follow suit. The same line of thought arose when the University of California announced their test-blind pilot last year.

Furthermore, the College Board (the organization that designs and implements the SAT) has responded to this cascade of test-optional policies by announcing forthcoming changes to the SAT that they argue will make the test fairer, more equitable, and more accessible. Whether these changes change colleges’ calculations about the test remains to be seen.

But even if one school’s policy isn’t enough to change the landscape for good, particularly if the College Board’s changes to the test are convincing, the decline in SAT/ACT requirement policies for college admissions seem to be snowballing. If things continue on this path, we may be looking at an entirely test-optional future in college admissions.

Final Thoughts

So what does this mean for your college admissions process? Ultimately, SAT/ACT scores are just one part of the college admissions process. The upside of these changes is that if you’re a strong test taker, you’ll still have the option to showcase that particular strength in your applications. But if you’re not, the landscape is definitely improving for you—and is likely to continue to do so over the coming months and years.

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February 16, 2022

Is Yale SAT optional 2023?
Yale and Princeton will not require SAT or ACT scores for at least another year (photo credit: Namkota).

Yale University and Princeton University, the last two holdouts, have joined the party in the Ivy League by extending their test-optional admisisons policies through at least fall of 2023. That’s right. Each and every one of the eight Ivy League schools — in addition to the vast majority of highly selective universities — will remain test-optional through next year…if not longer. As we said when Harvard University extended its test-optional admissions policy, where Harvard goes the rest tend to follow. Yale and Princeton have now followed along like their other Ivy League peers.

Yale’s admissions office states on its website, “In response to the ongoing disruptions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, Yale will extend its test-optional admissions policy for an additional year. All applicants for undergraduate admission for fall 2023 enrollment may apply with or without ACT or SAT scores. Applicants who have successfully completed one or more ACT or SAT exams should consider including scores, even if those scores are below the middle 50% ranges listed below. Yale’s internal research has consistently shown that ACT and SAT scores are a significant predictor of a student’s undergraduate academic performance. When students include scores with their applications, the Yale Admissions Committee evaluates them within each student’s unique context and uses them to augment other academic indicators throughout the application.”

Princeton’s admissions office states on its website, “The Princeton University Office of Undergraduate Admission continues to assess the effects the pandemic has had on teaching and learning in secondary schools around the world – particularly the inconsistencies created in classrooms due to the uncertainty of in-person instruction. As a result, we will continue to operate in a test optional environment for first-year applicants applying during the 2022-23 cycle for Princeton’s Class of 2027. Students who opt to apply to Princeton without an ACT or SAT will not be at a disadvantage in our process. We will continue with a holistic evaluation of each application and will continue to assess testing requirements for students applying after next year’s cycle.”

Now, loyal readers of Ivy Coach’s college admissions blog know that admissions officers at our nation’s elite universities often don’t tell it like it is. They say they’re need-blind? And water is dry. They say it doesn’t matter if you demonstrate interest? And ice cubes are hot. They say it doesn’t matter if you submit test scores. Nonsense! And sometimes you don’t even have to read between the lines. After all, Yale is basically urging students who have taken the SAT or ACT to submit their scores when the admissions committe writes, “Applicants who have successfully completed one or more ACT or SAT exams should consider including scores, even if those scores are below the middle 50% ranges listed below…” Read this line again. And again before choosing not to submit an SAT or ACT score to Yale or to any highly selective university.

 


 

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Is Class of 2023 SAT optional?

More than 1,700 colleges and universities so far are not requiring students to submit SAT and ACT scores when they apply for admission for fall 2023, only a slightly lower number of institutions than the previous admissions cycle.

Will Ivy Leagues go test optional 2023?

Harvard, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Penn, Dartmouth, and Stanford have all recently announced that they will remain test optional through the high school class of 2023, with Cornell going a step further remaining test optional through the high school class of 2024, and Harvard through 2026!

Does Yale require SAT for 2024?

Our assessment is that Test Optional is here to stay, and we are thrilled! At this point, we are recommending that the high school class of 2024 still consider taking the ACT or SAT, but whether or not they submit their scores should depend on test availability and personal performance. Our advice is that: 1.

Does Yale need SAT score for Class of 2025?

Yale SAT Score Analysis (New 1600 SAT) There's no absolute SAT requirement at Yale, but they really want to see at least a 1470 to have a chance at being considered.