
   Kuni wrote, The opinions expressed in this article are mine, and mine alone. 
   They do not reflect the perspectives of the publisher or anyone else associated with the publisher.
   Also please note that the SAT has been “redesigned” multiple times since this article 
   was written in 2014 and the CLT has been added to the mix since then as well.—ED
  
  I	n April 2016, the College Board will implement the “Redesigned”
  SAT. Right after the announcement came out, I got flooded with calls and
  emails. Some parents panicked, thinking the changes were taking place
  immediately. 
  
	The SAT Has Changed Before
  In the last 20 years, the SAT has undergone many changes. In 1994, they
  dropped the Antonyms section (this was more of a vocabulary exercise).
  In 1995 they started doing this thing called “Centering,” which is
  a fancy word for curving the scores.
  In 2005, they added a Writing section and the notorious essay. This Writing
  section was actually a throwback to earlier SATs that had a Grammar
  sub-section. In addition, they dropped the Analogies and the Quantitative
  Comparisons. They also changed the way the SAT would be scored, making the
  Writing section a completely distinct section and independent score, so that
  the maximum score went from 1600 to 2400, creating a great deal of confusion
  that still exists 10 years later.
  Why did they make these changes in 2005 in the first place?
  This was prompted by a potential move by the University of California system.
  They had threatened to drop the SAT as part of their admissions criteria. At
  that time, students seeking admission to the University of California system
  represented about 9% of the total SAT market. So, needless to say, if 9% of
  your market share threatens to leave, you will be motivated to make drastic
  changes, which is what happened.
  In contrast, the ACT has undergone only one change in the last 20 years adding
  an optional essay in 2005 to align its testing to those colleges who are going
  to require the SAT essay. In 2012, for the first time, more students took the
  ACT than SAT.
	The real irony here is that in public colleges in California, only the nine
	schools in the University of California System (UCLA, UC Berkeley, UC Davis,
	etc.) use the Writing section that they made such a fuss about including. The 23
	schools in the California State System (Cal Poly, Long Beach State, Fresno
	State, San Diego State, San Jose State, etc.) use only the Math and Reading
	sections.
  The Writing section has made the SAT  less relevant, and the triple-digit
  increase in those taking the ACT has certainly made an impact.
	Why Is It Changing Now [2014]?
  There’s a lot of rhetoric and “spinning” on why these
  changes are being made. Most of it, in my opinion, is fluff. I believe the
  College Board, under its new leadership, has realized it’s time to end
  this 10-year debacle.
  The 2005 SAT change caused incredible confusion in the college admissions
  process. Indeed, many colleges considered the Writing section and the Essay to
  be so inconsistent that some 85% of colleges do not even use the Writing or
  Essay score for admissions and scholarships. If the vast majority of colleges
  believe one-third of your test is irrelevant, it’s probably a sign to
  change things.
  Also, just to provide even more information on how colleges actually use test
  scores, here is a link to an article that gives very specific
  information on how colleges use scores and whether or not they will take the
  highest score across multiple tests (a.k.a. “Super Scoring”):
  
  	blog.prepscholar.com/which-sat-score-do-schools-use.
  One other small item is that in 2016, the SAT will be available on computer at
  those test sites that have sufficient computers for students to use. The ACT
  is going to beat the SAT to the punch on this, because they will be
  introducing the ACT on computer in 2015. [The SAT will be going digital-only
  in 2024, i.e., no paper tests any more. What happened with the ACT in 2015? I don’t know.
  blog.prepscholar.com says the ACT CBT became available in the US beginning in September, 2020.—ED]
	Common Core
  There’s a lot of concern about the Common Core and the SAT. David
  Coleman became President of the College Board in 2012 after a stint as senior
  executive with the group that developed the Common Core. His association with
  the Common Core has caused many to speculate that the SAT will be aligned with
  the Common Core.
  Although the rhetoric used by the College Board indicates the SAT is supposed
  to reflect what a student learns in high school, the SAT itself still
  requires—and tests—the student’s reasoning ability. Whether
  or not a student is in a Common Core program will be irrelevant on the test.
  Because Common Core is based on academic content, not 
  reasoning ability, I do
  not foresee the SAT becoming a Common Core test. Indeed, the SAT has to
  maintain a relative parity with the ACT, which doesn’t seem to be
  changing and hasn’t changed in the last 20 years.
	Actual Changes
  I’m not going to list all the changes [from back in 2014—ED] but here’s a quick synopsis:
	
		- The essay will be optional
- Scoring returns to the pre-2005 1600 point system
- A portion of the Math Section has to be done without a calculator
- No penalty for wrong answers (the SAT currently deducts points for wrong
		answers; the ACT doesn’t)
- You can test on computers if the testing center has them
- This will “trickle down” to affect the “Redesigned”
		PSAT
 
	“Redesigned” Test Preparation
  Another thing I found very curious about the new “Redesigned” SAT
  is the College Board’s official position on formal preparation programs.
  Prior to 2005, the official position was that test-prep courses really
  didn’t work. The College Board insisted that the best way to prepare for
  the test was to simply take practice tests and that it was a waste of money to
  take expensive preparation courses. That changed in 2005 when both SAT and ACT
  began to offer their own preparation courses that could be purchased through
  their websites.
  With the 2016 “Redesigned” SAT, the College Board has made a
  180-degree turn on its perspective on test prep courses. In a major public
  relations move, the College Board announced it has now teamed with Khan
  Academy to provide a free online prep course in order to level the playing
  field for “students who could not afford expensive test prep
  programs.” So the College Board is finally admitting that test-prep
  courses do help and actually have an impact on student performance on the SAT.
  I say that this is a “public relations” move, because Khan Academy
  has been offering free test prep online for several years. So this is not new,
  and certainly no more than a cosmetic effort to help those who cannot afford
  expensive test preparation. Since the Khan Academy courses have always been
  free, they also are free for the College Board, which doesn’t have to
  invest in anything. In fact, other than the announcement of the College
  Board’s collaboration with Khan Academy, I have not seen that the
  ?College Board is making any significant donation or investment in Khan
  Academy or its test-prep program. I would invite anyone who has seen any news
  on this to share it with me.
  Most test-preparation programs (including Khan Academy’s) focus on
  increasing the student’s academic ability as a means to better prepare
  and perform on the test. Pick up any of the major test-prep publications and
  you’ll see a common pattern where they provide an academic review,
  usually consisting of fractions, decimals, percentages, vocabulary, and
  grammar. The assumption is that the more academically prepared student is, the
  better the student will perform on the test.
	Do High-School Students Know More than a 7th Grader?
  Early-identification programs, such as the Duke Talent Identification Program
  (TIP), have seventh graders taking the SAT and ACT. These provide recognition
  for those who score higher than 50% of seniors and even higher recognition for
  those who score higher than 90% of seniors.
  I’m still waiting for someone to explain how the SAT can “test the
  skills you’re learning in school” and “test your knowledge
  of reading, writing and math—subjects that are taught every day in
  high-school classrooms” when you have seventh graders scoring higher
  than seniors, having never taken a high-school course.
  Indeed, my own experience of preparing students for the Duke TIP for almost 20
  years, training seventh graders in logic and reasoning, and providing them
  test-taking tools and techniques have yielded more than my share of seventh
  graders receiving recognition for scoring higher than most seniors on the SAT
  and ACT.
	What to Do? (No Need to Panic)
  So, to conclude, the SAT is going to change. There are some substantive
  changes, such as dropping the Writing section, but overall, the SAT is simply
  looking more like the ACT than ever before.
  The College Board does have enormous free resources on its site, and I urge
  everyone to exploit these. In my own prep course, we require students to go
  through the sites in their first lesson. I do not recommend their Official SAT
  Online Course, but I do highly recommend their 
  Official SAT Study Guide book—which I use in my course.
  My final advice on the SAT and ACT: Take both . . . early
  . . . and often.