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The advanced placement opportunity gap in Arizona: access, participation, and success

Version 2 2024-06-17, 23:53
Version 1 2017-04-07, 08:14
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 23:53 authored by J Cisneros, JL Holloway, L Gomez, K Corley, J Powers
Participation in Advanced Placement (AP) classes and AP test-taking are widely viewed as indicators of students’ college readiness. We analyzed enrollment in AP courses and AP test outcomes in Arizona to document disparities in students’ access to rigorous curricula in high school and outline some implications of these patterns for education stakeholders. Findings suggest that although 80% of high schools in Arizona offered at least one AP course, the total number of AP courses offered varied considerably across schools. Small schools and schools that served higher percentages of minority students were less likely to offer a wide range of AP courses than large schools and schools with majority White student populations. Although Hispanic students were underrepresented in AP courses, they had the highest test-taking rate. Only a third of the Hispanic students who took AP courses passed the AP test.

History

Journal

AASA journal of scholarship and practice

Volume

11

Season

Summer 2014

Pagination

20-33

Location

Alexandria, Va.

ISSN

1550-9850

eISSN

1931-6569

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

[2014, AASA]

Issue

2

Publisher

American Association of School Administrators