CANCEL ALL JANUARY SCORES OF KOREAN AND CHINESE

We appeal to the ETS and Collegeboard

We demand the cancellation of all scores of every single Korean and Chinese student who took the January 24th, 2015 SAT exam in internationally-designated nations.

By using a different international exam in Hong Kong and Singapore, which was a repeat of the June 2014 international exam, did you really think you can prevent cheating by Chinese or Koreans? You forget that because those of Korean nationality cannot take the January exam in Korea, many Koreans chose to take exam in Hong Kong in January. That means that Korean students who had took the June exam only 6-7 months ago in Korea and flew out to Hong Kong, just because they had no other option and HK is nearby, got exactly the same test!

It doesn’t matter whether they chose to cheat or not. Your negligence in recycling tests, and not even old tests, but recent tests that have been seen by many Koreans and Chinese, is the solely responsibility for this mass delay.

Moreover, the October 2012 international exam that you chose to reuse in most of the other international countries is another exam that the College Board knows has been circulating among many Korean and Chinese academies after the many investigations and arrests beginning in 2013. But still you chose to reuse this exam in January 24, 2015 and everyone is wondering why there is a massive delay among Chinese and the Koreans student?

Your organizations, both the College Board and ETS, are fully responsible for this irresponsible behavior, and we demand rightfully, for honest students such as I and others, that the scores of every single Korean and Chinese student who took the January 24th SAT I exam be cancelled.

@ConcernedK‌

@CleanSAT‌

@Johndoesntcheat‌

First, conspiratorial rumors of June 2014 domestic being mass distributed among Korean academies (confirmed, of course, by Schaefeneggar and Co.), then a blacklist of 16 suspected criminal teachers, and now an absolutely heart-wrenching letter of appeal to the College Board.

Why don’t we just nominate you as the new president of the College Board?