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Four APs Go AWOL

cbnetwork | January 9, 2009

The recession hasn’t just taken its toll on jobs and sales, it’s also hitting education — standardized testing, to be precise. The College Board, ruler of all things AP and SAT, just announced that it would cease to offer Advanced Placement exams in Italian, computer science AB, French literature, and Latin literature. The decision, according to the College Board, was made in light of inadequate funding for the exams and a lack of interest on the part of high school students. While the AP exams in English and history regularly score hundreds of thousands of test takers, the exams being dropped only had in the range of 2,000 to 5,000 test takers each.

Interestingly enough, the recently added Chinese and Japanese AP exams will continue despite equally low interest amongst high school students. Reports say that this is because these new exams are administered by computer while tests like the Italian AP exam are taken the old-fashioned, pen-and-paper way. Our question: why can’t the College Board just bring the four defunct AP exams into the digital age and cut costs at the same time? It’s unfair that students eager to get a start on earning their college credits (and cutting down their tuition costs) will no longer be able to thanks to a money-minded business decision.

– Genevieve M. Blaber

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