Wednesday, 16 January 2013
Dartmouth eliminates AP credits. Bad move.
Vox Clamantis
Too Broad a Brush
To the Editor:
The College’s new policy to stop granting credits
for Advanced Placement courses is disappointing
(“Registrar to restrict AP, IB credits,” Jan. 9).
The AP program is a series of 34 introductory
college-level courses and exams that students can
take in high school for which they may receive
college credit and the courses are vetted by college
professors throughout the country. College
students, taking equivalent subjects, field test the
AP exams and their scores are compared with
their end-of-course grades.
AP exams are graded each year by college
professors working in concert with high school
teachers. AP course materials are college-level.
For example, the textbook I used to teach AP
psychology was the best-selling textbook in both
the AP and college markets. High school teachers
typically attend training workshops during
the summer to help ensure that they have the
necessary skills to teach AP classes.
Not only is Dartmouth’s new policy likely to
cost the school hundreds of applicants who will
instead attend colleges that grant AP credit, but
it will also drag down Dartmouth students who
are forced to repeat introductory subject material
they have already mastered.
Dartmouth and other schools should certainly
examine AP critically and regularly to ensure
standards — the College Board makes recommendations,
but it is the duty of individual departments
at various colleges and universities to make
sure that a particular AP class is equivalent to
an introductory course they offer. The problem
with Dartmouth’s new policy is that it paints with
too broad a brush. While particular AP courses
undoubtedly will not fit individual department requirements,
many will. The faculty should revisit
this issue after the various departments have had
a chance to review individual AP courses, syllabi
and exams.
Patrick Mattimore ’72
Chiang Mai, Thailand
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