History
20th century
After the end of21st century
In 2006, over one million students took over two million Advanced Placement examinations. Many high schools in the United States offer AP courses, though the College Board allows any student to take any examination regardless of participation in its respective course. Therefore, home-schooled students and students from schools that do not offer AP courses have an equal opportunity to take AP exams. In 2007, hedge fund manager and philanthropist Whitney Tilson helped create a $1 million program (called Reach, for Rewarding Achievement) funded by philanthropists to pay students in 25 public schools and six Roman Catholic private schools in New York City who do well on Advanced Placement exams. High school students receiving a top score of five on one of the exams earned $1,000 (a four was worth $750, and a three was worth $500). The schools chosen for the program all had a high proportion of low-income black or Latino students. Tilson approached the Pershing Square Foundation to finance the project, and it agreed to give the project $1 million for its first year.Jennifer Medina (October 15, 2007)Scoring
AP tests are scored on a 1 to 5 scale as follows: *5 – Extremely well qualified *4 – Well qualified *3 – Qualified *2 – Possibly qualified *1 – No recommendation The multiple-choice component of the exam is scored by computer, while the free-response and essay portions are scored by trained Readers at the AP Reading each June. The scores on various components are weighted and combined into a raw Composite Score. The Chief Reader for each exam then decides on the grade cutoffs for that year's exam, which determine how the Composite Scores are converted into the final grades. During the process, a number of reviews and statistical analyses are performed to ensure that the grading is reliable. The overall goal is for the grades to reflect an absolute scale of performance which can be compared from year to year. Some colleges use AP test scores to exempt students from introductory coursework, others use them to place students in higher designated courses, and some do both. Each college's policy is different, but most require a minimum score of 3 or 4 to receive college credit. Typically, this appears as a "CR" grade on the college transcript, although some colleges and universities will award an A grade for a 5 score. Some countries, such as Germany, that do not offer general admission to their universities and colleges for holders of an American high school diploma without preparatory courses will directly admit students who have completed a specific set of AP tests, depending on the subject they wish to study there. In addition, completing AP courses helps students qualify for various types of scholarships. According to the College Board, 31 percent of colleges and universities look at AP experience when making scholarship decisions. Beginning with the May 2011 AP Exam administration, the College Board changed the scoring method of AP Exams. Total scores on the multiple-choice section are now based on the number of questions answered correctly. Points are no longer deducted for incorrect answers and, as was the case before, no points are awarded for unanswered questions. However, scoring requirements have also been increased.Score reporting
Starting with the May 2013 AP Examination Administration, the College Board launched an Internet-based score reporting service. Students can use their 2013 AP Number or Student Number (if one was indicated) along with a College Board Account to access current and previous years' exam scores. This system can also be used to send scores to colleges and universities for which a four-digit institutional code is assigned.Exam subsidies
Recognizing that the cost could be an impediment to students of limited means, a number of states and municipalities independent of the College Board have partially or fully subsidized the cost. The state of Florida reimburses school districts for the exam costs of students enrolled in Advanced Placement courses. TheCourses
Current subjects
There are currently 40 courses and exams available through the AP Program.Courses in development
In 2024, the College Board announced pilot programs for several new AP exams as part of the AP Career Kickstart program: *AP Cyber: Networking *AP Cyber: Security *AP Business Principles/Personal Finance *AP Anatomy and Physiology In the announcement, the College Board additionally noted that "We plan to build out multiple career and technical education (CTE) pathways in information technology (networking, cybersecurity, coding) and additional pathways in business and health sciences." In 2018, when the AP World History exam was discontinued, the College Board announced their commitment to developing two replacement courses, AP World History: Ancient and AP World History: Modern, but so far only the Modern course has launched, with the Ancient course still in development.Discontinued courses
Over the decades that the AP program has run, several AP courses and exams have been discontinued or replaced, including * Computer Science AB (discontinued 2009) * International English Language (discontinued 2002) * French Literature (discontinued 2009) * German Literature (discontinued 1983) * Latin Literature (discontinued 2009) * Latin: Vergil (discontinued 2012) * Music Listening and Literature (discontinued 1991) * Physics B (discontinued 2014) * Russian Language and Culture (discontinued 2010)Recent and upcoming exam changes
2016–2017
* AP World History ** This exam will also undergo the same basic changes to the 2014–2015 United States History and 2015–2016 European History exams. *** Shortened multiple-choice section with 55 questions, accounting for 40% of the total exam score. These are reduced from 70 questions and 50% in previous years, respectively. *** Four short-answer questions, however students are only required to answer one of the final two short-answer questions, in place of one of the long essays, accounting for 20% of the total exam score. These questions are given a 40-minute writing period. *** Document-based question (DBQ) and the remaining long essay now account for 25% and 15% of the exam score respectively. New writing periods of 60 minutes and 40 minutes respectively are given instead of the combined 120-minute writing period for all three essays in previous exams. *AP Calculus AB **Time format changed **Addition of L'Hôpital's rule *AP Calculus BC **Addition of limit comparison tests, absolute and conditional convergence, and the alternating series.2018–2019
* AP United States Government and Politics ** Section I (MCQ) will be extended from 60 questions in 45 minutes to 55 questions in 80 minutes. It will still count towards 50% of the total exam score. *** The questions will feature greater use of scenarios and stimulus material. *** The number of answer choices for each question will be reduced from five to four. ** Section II (FRQ) will include four questions in 100 minutes (the same amount of questions and time as the previous exams). The section as a whole will be worth 50% of the total exam score. All four questions are weighted equally (each is worth 12.5% of the total exam score). *** One will be a concept application question involving a political scenario. *** One will be a quantitative analysis and interpretation question with a visual stimulus. ***One will be a SCOTUS Comparison, a comparison between one case that is required knowledge outlined in the course and exam description, and the other not being of prior knowledge to the students. *** One will be an argumentation essay requiring supporting evidence and reasoning.2019–2020
* As a result of the2020–2021
* AP Comparative Government and Politics ** Section I (Multiple Choice): The number of questions will remain the same at 55 questions, but time for the section will increase from 45 minutes to 60 minutes. It will continue to be worth 50% of the total exam score. *** Each question will now have 4 possible options instead of 5. *** There will be 2 text-based sources followed by a few questions. *** There will be 3 quantitative sources followed by a few questions. ** Section II (Free Response): The number of questions will decrease from 8 questions to 4 questions. The time will also decrease from 100 minutes to 90 minutes. It will continue to be worth 50% of the total exam score. *** Question 1: Conceptual Analysis *** Question 2: Quantitative Analysis *** Question 3: Comparative Analysis *** Question 4: Argument Essay * AP Biology ** Section I (Multiple Choice): The number of questions will be reduced from 69 to 60 questions. Grid-in questions will no longer be on the exam. ** Section II (Free Response): The number of questions will be reduced from 8 to 6, but the time allocation for the section stays the same. *** The two long questions will both focus on "interpreting and evaluating experimental results". *** The section will have four short-answer questions. * AP English Language and Composition ** Section I (Multiple Choice): The number of questions will be reduced from 52–55 to 45. ** Section II (Free Response): The questions will now be scored with analytic rubrics. * AP Human Geography ** Section I (Multiple Choice): The number of questions will be reduced from 75 to 60, with increased emphasis on analyzing quantitative and qualitative sources. The time allocation for the section remains the same. ** Section II (Free Response): Each question will now be worth 7 points. * AP Computer Science Principles ** The Explore Performance Task will be replaced with some multiple-choice questions, and the College Board will be releasing a new Create Task. * AP Italian Language and Culture ** Section I (Multiple Choice): The 65 questions will now be split into two parts with nine sets total: *** Part A will have 30 questions and be 40 minutes long. *** Part B will have 35 questions and be 55 minutes long.2021–2022
*AP Physics 1: Algebra-Based **Units 8-10 have been removed from the AP Physics 1 curriculum as they are covered in AP Physics 2. *** The topics of electric charges and forces, DC circuits, and mechanical waves and sound have been removed. However, kinematics, dynamics, circular motion and gravitation, energy, momentum, simple harmonic motion, and torque and rotational motion are still covered with increased emphasis on each topic.2022–2023
*AP Chemistry **Section I (Multiple Choice): Questions will now permit the use of a calculator. The number and type of questions, as well as the section's time allocation remains the same.2023–2024
*AP Precalculus **New course added with first testing term being May 2024. The exam has two sections: 40 multiple-choice questions on the first and four free-response questions on the second. *AP World History: Modern **Scoring criteria for the DBQ and LEQ have changed, requiring the use of 4 or more sources for both analysis points. *AP Computer Science Principles **On the Create Task, the Written Responses will be replaced with a Personalized Project Reference. Then, on the end-of-course exam, after the MCQ section, there will be a new Written Response section, with 2 questions (4 prompts total) in 1 hour, worth 20% of one's score. *AP United States Government and Politics **College score verification year for the class, resulting in the exam being made easier and pass rate increasing by 23.8%.2024–2025
*AP Physics 1: Algebra-Based and AP Physics 2: Algebra-Based **Fluids, which used to be Unit 1 in AP Physics 2, became Unit 8 in AP Physics 1. **With Fluids no longer being in its curriculum, the section of AP Physics 2 that covered Waves and Optics was split into two units that covered the topic with more depth. **The format of both exams changed in the same way: ***The number of MCQs decreased from 50 to 40, and the time for the section decreased from 90 minutes to 80 minutes. Multiselect questions were removed. ***The number of FRQs went down from 5 to 4, but the time for the section went up from 90 minutes to 100 minutes *AP Physics C: Mechanics and AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism **The format of both exams changed in the same way: ***The number of MCQs increased from 35 to 40, and the time for that section increased from 45 minutes to 80 minutes. ****Each MCQ was changed to only have 4 options, rather than 5. ***The number of FRQs increased from 3 to 4, and the time for that section increased from 45 minutes to 100 minutes. ***The exams were no longer in the same testing session. *Several AP Exams went fully digital, including AP African American Studies, AP Art History, AP Comparative Government and Politics, AP Computer Science A, AP Computer Science Principles, AP English Language and Composition, AP English Literature and Composition, AP Environmental Science, AP European History, AP Human Geography, AP Latin, AP Psychology, AP Seminar, AP United States Government and Politics, AP United States History, and AP World History: Modern. **Several other AP Exams went hybrid digital, with students completing the MCQ section and viewing the FRQ section digitally, but answering the FRQ section in paper booklets. This includes: AP Biology, AP Calculus AB and BC, AP Chemistry, AP Macroeconomics, AP Microeconomics, AP Physics 1 and 2: Algebra-based, AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism, AP Physics C: Mechanics, AP Precalculus, and AP Statistics. None of the remaining AP Exams experienced a change in administration.Recent exam information
Criticism
Decreasing quality
Lichten appears to have been the first to question whether AP can maintain high academic standards while experiencing explosive growth. Whether the AP program can serve large numbers of students well is a matter of some concern within the education field.Passing scores and university credit
A 2024 report stated that students who receive scores of 3 and higher are being given college credit at fewer top colleges and universities. Also in 2024, Hess noted that an increasing proportion of students who take and pass AP courses are not ready for college-level work.Academic achievement
A 2010 study of the impact of the Advanced Placement program on students' academic achievement found that students who took AP courses in the sciences but failed the AP exam performed no better in college science courses than students without any AP course at all. Referring to students who complete the course but fail the exam, the head researcher, Phillip M. Sadler, stated in an interview that "research shows that they don't appear to have learned anything during the year, so there is probably a better course for them." Two subsequent studies compared non-AP students with AP students who had not taken their course's AP exam, had taken the AP exam but did not pass it, or had passed the AP exam. Like Sadler's study, both found that AP students who passed their exam scored highest in other measures of academic achievement. The largest study of this sort, with a sample size of over 90,000, replicated these results and also showed that non-AP students performed with equal levels of academic achievement as AP students who did not take their course's AP exam—even after controlling for over 70 intervening variables. This led the authors to state that AP participation "is not beneficial to students who merely enroll in the courses..."See also
* Advanced Placement Awards * GCE Advanced Level * Education in Canada * Education in the United States * International Baccalaureate * 2020 AP exams controversyReferences
Further reading
*McCauley, David. 2007. The Impact of Advanced Placement and Dual Enrollment Program on College Graduation. *Applied Research Project. Texas State University. http://ecommons.txstate.edu/arp/206/ *Schneider, Jack. 2008.External links