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Advanced Placement English Language and Composition

 
Wikipedia: Advanced Placement English Language and Composition
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Advanced Placement English Language and Composition (or AP English Language and Composition, AP Lang and Comp, AP English III or AP Lang or AP Comp or APLAC) is a course and examination offered by the College Board as part of the Advanced Placement Program.

Contents

The course

AP English Language and Composition is a course in the study of the structure and use of the English language, usually taken in a student's junior year in high school, often followed by the AP English Literature and Composition course.

The primary purpose

"The AP English Language and Composition course is designed to help students become skilled readers of prose written in a variety of periods, disciplines, and rhetorical contexts and to become skilled writers who can compose for a variety of purposes. By their writing and reading in this course, students should become aware of the interactions among a writer's purposes, audience expectations, and subjects, as well as the way generic conventions and the resources of language contribute to effective writing... Students are strongly encouraged to take the AP examination at the end of the course."[1]

Emphasized skills

The College Board's suggested curriculum for the course places a strong emphasis on the development of proficient reading and writing skills. In particular, thorough, efficient reading and contextual understanding of difficult historical material[2], and the ability to spontaneously write an organized and developed essay that demonstrates a strong stylistic and expressive command over the English language[3].

The exam

Format

The AP English Language and Composition exam consists of two sections, a one-hour multiple-choice section and a two-hour and fifteen-minute free-response section[4]. The exam is further divided as follows:

Section I: Multiple-Choice Section II: Free-Response
# of Questions 55 - 60 3
Percentage of score 45 55

Scoring

The multiple-choice section is scored by computer, with a correct answer receiving 1 point, an incorrect answer losing 1/4 of a point, and a blank answer receiving 0 points. These numbers are used to calculate the adjusted multiple-choice score.

The free-response section is scored by hundreds of educators each June. Each essay is read by two readers. Barring a significant discrepancy, their scores are averaged and added to the adjusted multiple-choice score to receive the composite score. The composite is converted into an AP score of 1-5 using a scale for that year's exam[5]. Scoring is holistic, meaning that no rubric is used to judge specific elements, and each essay is scored in its entirety.

Students generally receive their scores by mail in mid-July of the year they took the test. Alternately, they can receive their scores by phone as early as July 1 for a fee[6]. Sub-scores are not available for the English Language and Composition Exam.

Grade distributions

In the 2009 administration 337,441 students took the exam. The mean score was a 2.88.[7]

Grade distribution in recent years has been:

Year Score percentages
5 4 3 2 1
2009 10.5% 19.0% 30.2% 28.4% 11.9%
2008 8.7% 18.2% 31.4% 30.5% 11.3%

Composite score range

The College Board has released information on the composite score range (out of 150) required to obtain each grade:[8]

Final Score Range (2001) Range (2002)
5 108-150 113-150
4 93-107 96-112
3 72-92 76-95
2 43-71 48-75
1 0-42 0-47

Recent changes

In 2007, a new type of essay prompt, the "synthesis" essay, was introduced to the exam[9]. This question, somewhat like the DBQ-type questions found on many AP history exams, asks students to support an argument using provided documents. It differs from AP history questions, however, in that students are only required to address three out of six provided sources.

The introduction of the synthesis question resulted in a slight change in the test's format to include a 15-minute reading period at the beginning of the free response portion of the test, during which students may read the prompts and examine the documents. They may use this time to make notes, but not to write the essays.

Also in 2007, there was a change in the multiple choice portion of the exam. It was requested to include questions about documentation and citation. These questions will be based on at least one passage which is a published work including footnotes or a bibliography[9].

References

External links


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