The nonprofit organization that administers SAT tests will drop the so-called “adversity score,” which combined neighborhood and school factors to produce a single number to supplement a student’s test score.
The adversity score, which took into account factors like neighborhood crime rate and advanced classes offered at a school, was introduced about two years ago and used by some 50 institutions amid criticism that college admission favored wealthy applicants.
David Coleman, head of the College Board, said Tuesday that the tool was “wrong” and “confusing.”
It will be replaced with another tool named “Landscape,” he said.