Illinois switching to ACT exams for state assessments
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[July 06, 2024]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – When Illinois high school students sit down to take their
annual state assessments next year, they will take a different exam than
in recent years.
The Illinois State Board of Education recently announced that starting
next spring, it will use the ACT exam rather than the SAT.
Both are standardized tests that measure students’ proficiency in core
subjects such as English language arts and math. Both are also commonly
used for college admissions – although many colleges and universities
have stopped requiring them – as well as scholarship applications.
Illinois, however, also uses them as part of the battery of tests
schools administer each year to meet federal mandates under the Every
Student Succeeds Act. Results of those tests are reported each year on
the Illinois Report Card and are used to hold schools and districts
accountable for meeting basic academic standards.
Illinois started using the SAT with Essay as the state assessment for
11th grade students in spring 2017. Two years later, it began using the
PSAT 8/9 exam for 9th grade students and the PSAT 10 for high school
sophomores.
At the time, according to ISBE, incorporating a college entrance exam
into the state’s annual assessment program was considered a bonus
because it gave nearly all graduating high school students a reportable
score, paid for by the state, which they could then use for college and
scholarship applications.
In recent years, though, many colleges and universities stopped
requiring either the SAT or ACT as part of their application and
admission processes.
In 2021, Illinois lawmakers passed the Higher Education Fair Admissions
Act requiring all public universities and community colleges to adopt a
“test-optional” policy for admissions, meaning students could
voluntarily choose whether to include them in their application package.
But ISBE continued using the tests as part of its federally mandated
statewide assessments.
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(Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Campbell)
The upcoming switch to the ACT exam came about through ISBE’s routine
procurement process. The agency’s contract with the College Board, the
nonprofit corporation that operates the SAT, was set to expire on June
30, prompting the agency to open a new bidding process.
The state board agreed to open the bidding process and solicit sealed
proposals from testing companies at its regular monthly meeting in
September 2023. The decision to award a six-year, $53 million contract
to ACT was finalized in May.
According to an FAQ document that ISBE has circulated, one of the
advantages of switching exams is the ACT includes a science component,
whereas the SAT only covered the core subjects of reading, writing and
math. That means 11th grade students will no longer have to take a
separate Illinois Science Assessment, thereby reducing overall testing
time.
The change also means that students who still want to take the SAT or
the PSAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test will have to do so
on their own, in addition to the statewide ACT accountability exam.
Local schools and districts will have the option of choosing whether to
administer those tests during the school day, but the state will not pay
for students to take those tests.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is
distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide.
It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert
R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the
Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial
Association.
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