Abstract

With more than 3 million participants per year, the Advanced Placement (AP) program is one of the most popular programs in the United States for exposing high-achieving high school students to advanced academic content. Sponsored by the College Board, the AP program provides a framework in which high school teachers can teach introductory college-level courses to high school students. These students then take one of 34 standardized tests at the end of the year, and students who score well on their course’s AP test can receive college credit from their university in which they later enroll. Despite the popularity of the AP program, remarkably little independent research has been conducted on the academic benefits of AP. In this article, I summarize the state of knowledge about the academic benefits of AP. Previous research and descriptive data indicate that AP students outperform non-AP students on a variety of academic measures, but many other aspects of the program are poorly understood, partially due to variability across AP subjects. These aspects include the causal impact of AP, which components of the program are most effective in boosting academic achievement, and how students engage with the AP program. I also conclude by making suggestions for researchers to use new methodologies to investigate new scientific and policy questions and new student populations to improve the educational scholars’ and practitioners’ understanding of the AP program.

Highlights

  • The Advanced Placement (AP) program is an academic program in which high school students can learn college-level material from their high school teachers and take a standardized exam at the end of the school year

  • Despite the widespread popularity of the AP program, there is remarkably little independent research on its academic benefits. (The College Board has numerous publications in this area.) The purpose of this article is to summarize the empirical research on the academic benefits of the AP program and to create a list of several scientific and policy questions that remain unanswered about the AP program

  • Since the 1950s, AP has grown from an obscure program serving a small number of elite high schools to the most common way that high school students receive an advanced curriculum (Lacy, 2010; Schneider, 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

The Advanced Placement (AP) program is an academic program in which high school students can learn college-level material from their high school teachers and take a standardized exam at the end of the school year. College Board studies have shown that AP students score higher on standardized test scores than non-AP students (Ewing, Camara, & Millsap, 2006; Mattern, Shaw, & Xiong, 2009; McKillip & Rawls, 2013). AP students hold more favorable attitudes toward the same academic material that their AP course covered (Patterson, 2009) and are more likely to major in a field related to their AP course than non-AP students are (Keng & Dodd, 2008; Mattern, Shaw, & Ewing, 2011; Morgan & Klaric, 2007)

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