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11,502
result(s) for
"Advanced Placement program"
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Advanced Placement: The Dual Challenge of Equal Access and Effectiveness
2018
The Advanced Placement (AP) program offers an opportunity for students to earn college credit and develop college-ready skills in high school The curriculum was initially designed for \"superior\" students at exclusive private schools. Recently, however, the AP program has expanded to serve more students from marginalized backgrounds, and equitable access has become one of its core objectives. Scholars have questioned whether AP can continue to offer effective college preparation while expanding beyond the populations it was initially designed to serve. This literature review summarizes existing research on whether the AP program has achieved its dual goals of equal access and effectiveness. The extant literature suggests that, despite impressive gains in access to AP, significant barriers remain to its becoming a program that ensures equal access for all students and effectively prepares them for college coursework. Assessing whether these barriers can be overcome, however, demands new approaches to AP research.
Journal Article
College Acceleration for All? Mapping Racial Gaps in Advanced Placement and Dual Enrollment Participation
by
Solanki, Sabrina
,
Xu, Di
,
Fink, John
in
Acceleration (Education)
,
Access to education
,
Accreditation (Institutions)
2021
This article documents the patterns of White-Black and White-Hispanic enrollment gaps in Advanced Placement (AP) and Dual Enrollment (DE) programs across thousands of school districts in the United States by merging several data sources. We show that the vast majority of districts have racial enrollment gaps in both programs, with wider gaps in AP than DE. Results from fractional regression models indicate that geographic variations in these gaps can be by both local and state factors. We also find that district-level resources and state policies that provide greater access to AP and DE are also associated with wider racial enrollment gaps, implying that greater resources may engender racial disparity without adequate efforts to provide equitable access and support for minority students.
Journal Article
Whose Deficit? Rural Student Perceptions of Secondary Curricular Opportunities via AP
The purpose of this narrative analysis was to assess the perceived curricular offerings and challenges of traditional-aged rural students in higher education, and to understand how these challenges relate to AP courses. Specifically, this study assessed the secondary curricular offerings available to rural students and how they affect their perceptions of success in the postsecondary environment. I conducted phenomenological interviews with 18 students and uncovered several key findings. Rural students in this study reported that Advanced Placement (AP) courses were critical to their preparation for higher education, but that these courses' availability was limited in their schools. Participants in this study reported feeling a loss of self-efficacy and perceived shift in identity due to their lack of advanced curricular offerings, especially AP courses. As a result, rural youth in this study reported being behind their peers in terms of credit-hour production by one to two academic years. Participants in this study felt that there was a particular lack of AP courses in science and math fields in their high school, which impacted their decision to enter a STEM field.
Journal Article
Categorical Inequality in Black and White: Linking Disproportionality Across Multiple Educational Outcomes
by
Shores, Kenneth
,
Still, Mela
,
Kim, Ha Eun
in
Academic Achievement
,
Academic achievement gaps
,
Academically Gifted
2020
We characterize the extent to which Black-White gaps for multiple educational outcomes are linked across school districts in the United States. Gaps in disciplinary action, grade-level retention, classification into special education and Gifted and Talented, and Advanced Placement course-taking are large in magnitude and correlated. Racial differences in family income and parent education are strikingly consistent predictors of these gaps, and districts with large gaps in one outcome are likely to have large gaps in another. Socioeconomic and segregation variables explain 1.7 to 3.5 times more variance for achievement relative to nonachievement outcomes. Systemic patterns of racial socioeconomic inequality drive inequalities across multiple educational outcomes; however, discretionary policies at local levels are more influential for nonachievement outcomes.
Journal Article
I Just Kind of Guessed
by
Cornett, Ariel
,
Fitzpatrick, Colleen
,
Gurlea, Michael
in
Academic Achievement
,
Active Learning
,
Advanced Placement
2023
This case study explored how a teacher, Ms. Walter, and her students experienced a unit of study on market structures in an Advanced Placement (AP) Microeconomics course. We employed qualitative research methods, drawing on the work of Nuthall and Alton-Lee, to connect students’ experiences of classroom instruction to their reasoning on an end-of-unit multiple-choice test modeled after the AP Exam. Findings indicate a key misalignment between opportunities to learn the content during the unit and student performance on the unit test.
Despite engaging in student-centered, interactive methods of instruction, students were unable to engage in the tasks required by the assessment.
Journal Article
Is Increased Access Enough? Advanced Placement Courses, Quality, and Success in Low-Income Urban Schools
by
Venegas, Kristan M.
,
Hallett, Ronald E.
in
Academic Achievement
,
Access to Education
,
Advanced Placement
2011
This article combines descriptive statistics and interviews with college-bound high school students to explore the connection between increased access and academic quality of Advanced Placement (AP) courses in low-income urban high schools. Results suggest that although moderately more opportunities to take AP courses exist than in previous years, students' sense of their own preparation and their resultant performance on AP exams do not indicate quality or appropriate preparation for college. The article is guided by a “funds of knowledge” framework, which emphasizes the value of instrumental and content aptitudes in preparation for college success.
Journal Article
\I'm Not Going to Be, Like, for the AP\: English Language Learners' Limited Access to Advanced College-Preparatory Courses in High School
2014
Advancement to postsecondary education for English language learners (ELLs) can be seriously constrained by a lack of academic preparation during high school. Currently, ELLs lag behind their non-ELL peers in their level of access to advanced college-preparatory courses. Through a qualitative case study of ELL education at a large public high school, we examine the educational practices that result in ELLs' restricted curricular choices. The findings expose the way in which ELLs' chances for rigorous academic preparation are systematically reduced and point to the importance of providing ELLs with high-level academic curriculum while also supplying linguistic scaffolding that makes such learning possible.
Journal Article
The College Preparatory Pipeline: Disparate Stages in Academic Opportunities
The rise in college preparatory coursework across American high schools appears not to affect college enrollment and graduation rates. This study uses the Civil Rights Data Collection to evaluate three stages along the college preparatory pipeline: access to, enrollment in, and mastery of Advanced Placement® and International Baccalaureate® coursework to understand the cumulative academic opportunities shaping students' college readiness. Leaks in the pipeline divert out historically marginalized students. An adaptation of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index captures the magnitude of these racial and ethnic disparities. Social context explains where school and district resources alleviate disparities to provide more equitable (i.e., proportionally representative) academic opportunities. These findings offer substantive direction to improve equality in students' college readiness opportunities.
Journal Article
Skin in the Game
by
Kapp, Reuben
,
Rodriguez-Wilhelm, Davinia
,
Rodriguez, Awilda
in
Academic readiness
,
Advanced Placement program
,
Advanced Placement Programs
2022
As part of their strategies to increase college readiness and reduce educational inequalities, at least 29 states subsidize Advanced Placement (AP) exam fees for low-income students. However, while Michigan’s state-level policy subsidized low-income student exams to $5 per exam, we found wide-ranging fee structures at high schools—from $0 to $50. Through a lens of policy implementation theory and using an embedded case study approach, this study examined this disjuncture between the state and school policies using interview data from 33 school personnel—counselors, AP Coordinators, administrators—in 31 high schools and state personnel in Michigan; state policy artifacts; and publicly available school data. We identified three major challenges—many schools hedged and set higher fees because they were unsure how much the legislature would approve each year; the state subsidy did not account for additional exam costs (e.g., exam proctors) that were passed down to the student; and the policy as written lacked enforceability and accountability. Policymakers were largely unaware of the amount schools ultimately charged low-income students. In the presence of an ambiguous policy and constrained resources, school personnel relied on their personal perspectives on fees and behavior (e.g., the need to reduce moral hazard and increase “skin in the game”) to rationalize low-income students fees. Together, these findings help explain how low-income students pay vastly different AP exam fees depending on the high school they attend in Michigan—with some schools severely impeding low-income students’ college preparatory opportunities.
Journal Article
The evidence base for advanced learning programs
by
Callahan, Carolyn M.
,
Plucker, Jonathan A.
in
Ability Grouping
,
Academically Gifted
,
Acceleration (Education)
2020
There is substantial evidence on the effectiveness of many forms of advanced education, especially various approaches to acceleration, ability grouping, and curricular innovations such as structured curriculum and enrichment. Nonetheless, additional research on the ways in which advanced education impacts the learning and lives of students across the variables of class, race, ethnicity, and gender is still needed, as it is for most educational interventions. Jonathan Plucker and Carolyn Callahan share the evidence base for several popular strategies and describe what evidence is still needed.
Journal Article