Monday, June 24, 2019

Schools in Less-Resourced Communities Implementing Advanced Placement Science Courses?


The Advanced Placement (AP) program has undergone two major reforms in recent decades: the first aimed at increasing access and the second at increasing relevance. Both initiatives are partially designed to increase the number of high school students from low-income backgrounds who have access to college-level coursework. Yet critics argue that schools in less-resourced communities are unable to implement AP at the level expected by its founders.

This report offers the first model of the components inherent in a well-implemented AP science course and the first evaluation of AP implementation with a focus on public schools newly offering the inquiry-based version of AP Biology and Chemistry courses. The researchers find that these frontier schools were able to implement most, but not all, of the key components of an AP science course.

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