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Ali Siraj/iStock

Ali Siraj/iStock(NEW YORK) — Students, teachers, colleges and universities have been caught in the crosshairs of the novel coronavirus outbreak which has now halted SAT and PSAT exams.

The College Board, the nonprofit organization behind the SAT exams, announced that its upcoming test in June is canceled due to COVID-19.

“To keep students safe, and in alignment with public health guidance and school closures across 192 countries, we will not be able to administer the SAT or SAT Subject Tests on June 6, 2020,” the College Board said in a statement.

During the global pandemic, the College Board recognized that students are anxious about how that will impact the college application process and offered a potential virtual solution for the future.

“In the unlikely event that schools do not reopen this fall, College Board will provide a digital SAT for home use, like how we’re delivering digital exams to 3 million AP students this spring,” it stated. “We would ensure that at-home SAT testing is simple, secure and fair, accessible to all, and valid for use in college admissions.”

A digital, remote version of the SAT test would still measure what students have learned in school and what they need to know to be successful in college.

Similarly, the ACT recently rescheduled it’s test that was slated earlier this month and postponed the exam until June 13.