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Assessing the Advanced Placement Program in American Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2015

Jerel A. Rosati*
Affiliation:
University of South Carolina

Extract

The Advanced Placement (AP) program has been growing rapidly in the last decade. In 1987, a new AP program was begun in American Government and Politics and its impact is beginning to be felt in high schools and colleges across the country. However, there has been no objective assessment of the program communicated and discussed throughout the political science community.

To begin—what is the AP program? The Advanced Placement program offers the equivalent of introductory college courses which may lead to college credit upon satisfactory performance on an AP exam. The AP program is administered by the College Board which contracts with the Educational Testing Service (ETS) to operate the AP examinations. “About 31 percent of American secondary schools currently participate, serving approximately 17 percent of their college-bound students in this way. This use, by both schools and students, has been growing steadily in recent years” (Guide to the AP Program, 1986, p. 4).

The College Board highlights the positive aspects of the AP program for learning, education, and all concerned—students, teachers, and administrators. AP programs are considered part of society's effort to revitalize the educational system in the United States, especially in high schools and higher education. The quality and implications of the AP program are all positively portrayed. Yet, the implementation of the AP program has not been closely examined and publicly discussed.

Type
Advanced Placement in Political Science
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 1989

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References

Advanced Placement Course Description: Government and Politics (The College Board, May 1988).Google Scholar
A Guide to the Advanced Placement Program (The College Board, May 1987).Google Scholar
Holsworth, Robert D. and Wray, J. Harry. 1987. American Politics and Everyday Life (MacMillan).Google Scholar
Lazer, Stephen. 1988. “The Introduction of the Advanced Placement Examination in Political Science,” The Political Science Teacher (Winter 1988), p. 19.Google Scholar
Pomper, Gerald M. 1988. “A Summer Institute in American Politics,” The Political Science Teacher (Winter), pp. 2021.Google Scholar