There a few schools that did it because students have dealt with covid-19:
MIT did it for 2020 and 2021 only. They announced it was back on for 2022 admissions.
the list that I see of colleges people heard of is: American University, Arizona State University, Columbia, Cornell, University of California, California State University (minus Cal State University Fullerton which requires the test be simply taken), Delaware, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, George Mason, George Washington, Harvard, Indiana University Bloomington, Kansas State, Loyola University New Orleans, Mississippi State University, Ole Miss, Princeton, Sarah Lawrence College, University of Arizona, University of Chicago, Holy Cross, Washington State University, Wake Forrest,
*St. Johns requires an essay in place of the standardized tests
**Texas, Texas A&M, and Texas Tech will will waive the standardized test requirement if you are in the top 10% of your graduating class with at least a 3.5 GPA
***Loyola University Chicago requires SAT scores for admission, but students who choose not to take it can still apply.
That's not most schools---that's a very small select few--with the Ivy League conducting an experiment not making the idea permanent.
But either way these kids got screwed because of a drivers mistake and its a nice talking point the company can bank and use as they see fit.