Over nearly a century, millions of American high school students have sharpened pencils and cracked open pamphlets to take the SAT. But this spring, they can leave the pencils at home. Starting next ...
The SAT has transitioned to a digital format, designed for faster pacing and a sharper focus on skill measurement rather than endurance. Though the test takes significantly less time than the paper ...
Students can say goodbye to those No. 2 pencils, portable sharpeners and big pink erasers; they no longer need to worry about having legible handwriting or fully shading the answer bubbles. The SAT is ...
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