What If The School Board Should Be Abolished

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High school students everywhere in the United States make very selective class choices based on careers they may want to pursue in the future. One decision that the students may make is to take an AP class. Among students, when they hear the name AP they automatically think stress, and homework, and tests; however it also means college credit, and advanced placement and promises a future. What if the College Board changed the benefits and decided that if the school board had a problem with the crew framework and felt the need to change it, then this AP class wouldn't be worth anything in college? The promises of college credit and advanced classes would be ripped from the students' hands, and the choices they made in order to take this …show more content…

However, the framework isn't meant to be a curriculum. The frameworks purpose is not to spoon-feed teachers the lesson plans; the framework is meant only to explain what needs to be taught generally. The LA times claims that the College Board states, "The curriculum framework that follows is just that — frameworks for conveying the content and skills typically required for college credit and placement," The College Board also states this very clearly in the teacher's framework. The school board is attacking the College Board on the vagueness of the framework and they [the College Board] have addressed that the framework is only meant to be a frame work. The College Board also includes in the Course and Exam overview document that, "...the framework consists of four components, each described below. The result is a course that prepares students for college credit and placement while relieving the pressure on AP teachers to cover all possible details of U.S. history at a superficial level." This also presents that fact that the course itself is not meant to go into great depth on specific events in history; the class is supposed to just touch on the subjects at a superficial level in order to focus on critical thinking. The class is not meant to prepare students to become obedient …show more content…

Based on the plans of the committee as presented by Ms. Williams, according to the Washington Post, "College Board has threatened to withdraw recognition of the county’s AP U.S. history courses if the school board changes the way the course is taught." The college board has threatened to take away the benefits that are most often the deciding factor about whether a student will elect to take any AP class. Advanced placement is very important to colleges, according to the college board framework, "Most four-year colleges and universities in the United States and universities in more than 60 countries recognize AP in the admission process and grant students credit, placement, or both on the basis of successful AP Exam scores." The amount of colleges in the world that recognize AP is enough that every student enrolled at Conant High School could go to a different college, with about 1,000 more colleges. It is unfair for the school board to deprive students of this potential benefit that could help their chances in being accepted into a university or college. The Jefferson County Board of Education's committee could potentially bar the students from receiving the future education they've worked so hard attain. The college board has also stated in the framework for teachers that, "Each AP course is modeled upon a comparable college

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