After canceling springtime SAT and ACT test dates to comply with limits on large gatherings due to the coronavirus pandemic, the College Board and ACT are now making plans so high-school students can take the college-admission exams come fall.

The College Board said Wednesday it plans to offer its SAT at least one weekend a month beginning in August, provide more options for free school-day tests in partnership with districts and states and, if school doesn’t open in the fall, create an online offering. All are contingent on public-health guidelines. It won’t conduct a test in early June.

The ACT, meanwhile, will offer a computer-based, at-home option for students in late fall or early winter, a spokesman said, with practice sessions available as soon as August.

The ACT canceled its April test session. A spokesman said it added a second set of test dates each for June and July, which could be helpful if crowd limits remain in effect this summer.

The College Board didn’t cancel its March test date, though with many test sites closed and some states already instituting stay-at-home orders by then, just a fraction of students who signed up for the exam were able to complete it. The May SAT test date and now the June one as well were also canceled.