Quantcast

Madison Reporter

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

MMSD sets new records for Advanced Placement testing

Webp l4fl288eyo3q22jy67fo7jpzsxti

Maia Pearson, Madison Metropolitan School District Board Vice President | Facebook

Maia Pearson, Madison Metropolitan School District Board Vice President | Facebook

For the 2023–24 academic year, the Madison Metropolitan School District (MMSD) set records for the number of students who took at least one Advanced Placement (AP) examination and the number of exams administered to those students.

In May, the district saw 1,845 students take a cumulative 3,803 AP tests over two weeks at the Alliant Energy Center. This represents an approximate 12% increase of 191 students and an approximate 19% increase of 602 exams over records set the previous year. MMSD’s pass rate was 76%, with an average score of 3.4 out of a possible 5.

In most cases, AP offerings give students the opportunity to earn college credits while still in high school. Accordingly, they are designed to be as rigorous and challenging as college-level courses, requiring participating students to do more independent study and display greater mastery of content than traditional honors courses.

"As a district, we encourage students to push themselves in the classroom, and we are heartened by the steady rise we have seen in our AP participation rate," said Mary Jankovich, MMSD’s executive director of secondary programs and pathways. "In many ways, our students’ increased interest in accelerated learning is a testament to the solid foundations they have built at the elementary and middle school levels and positions them well for post-secondary success.”

AP courses offer benefits that extend beyond the classroom as well, particularly in cost savings. Research shows that because most colleges and universities accept AP credits earned in high school, more AP students earn a degree on time—within four years of undergraduate study—than their peers, helping them avoid tuition associated with additional years of schooling.

"Doing well on the exams may provide college credit—the pay-off at the end of a year of hard work—but the ultimate reward lies in the journey," said Tim Peterson, MMSD's director of assessment. "In addition to our dedicated students, there are several people across the district who are directly responsible for the growth of our AP participation, including high school guidance counselors, AP teachers and coordinators, as well as our AVID program; they deserve kudos for their efforts.”

Further information regarding MMSD’s AP offerings—which span core subjects like mathematics and language arts as well as electives like music theory and African American studies—is available in course catalogs hosted on the MMSD website.

ORGANIZATIONS IN THIS STORY

!RECEIVE ALERTS

The next time we write about any of these orgs, we’ll email you a link to the story. You may edit your settings or unsubscribe at any time.
Sign-up

DONATE

Help support the Metric Media Foundation's mission to restore community based news.
Donate

MORE NEWS