<p>The College Board should definitely do more than just refund the check for the students who were really affected. While the publicity may make the College Board seem bad, it will actually be helpful for it in the long-term. Universities still rely heavily on standardized testing, so college-bound students will continue be forced to take a test. For many eastern U.S. students, the ACT is not as convenient as the SAT in terms of accessibility. Plus the SAT and SAT preparation is stressed a lot more. Ok, so now every future SAT test-taker is going to pay $50 because trust is lost in the College Board for this "one-time" anomaly. Thus, the College Board makes a greater profit. Got to love economics, but also, something has got to be done. I propose SCHOLARSHIPS. I made major decisions pertaining to college based on that October SAT, and five months later I find out I actually get 110 points greater than I originally thought. Forty some odd dollars back is not going to cut it. The College not only needs to be reliable for future students, but it needs to help out the students that it greatly hurt.</p>