The College Board announced it would scrap the SAT subject tests as well.
The move comes as the testing industry has been battered by questions about equity and troubled by logistical and financial challenges during the coronavirus pandemic.
Critics saw the changes not as an attempt to streamline the test-taking process for students, as the College Board portrayed the decision, but as a way of placing greater importance on Advanced Placement tests, which the board also produces, as a way for the organization to remain relevant and financially viable.
The main SAT, taken by generations of high school students applying to college, consists of two sections, one for math and the other for reading and writing. But since at least the 1960s, students have also had the option of taking subject tests to show their mastery of subjects like history, languages, and chemistry. Colleges often use the tests to determine where to place students for freshman courses, especially in the sciences and languages. But the College Board said the subject tests have been eclipsed by the rise of Advanced Placement exams.