<p>If you can’t crack 1050 on the sat, you don’t deserve a scholarship that is worth over $11,000 dollars. It doesn’t discriminate against those who are poor, but rather those who shouldn’t be taking public resources to attend college. Right now, people are receiving sub average scores, and taking their Bright Futures scholarship to community colleges, where they are put in remedial classes and/or not succeeding. That needs to stop, and I believe the proposed changes will stop it.</p>