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Unlocking the potential in your students

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Presentation on theme: "Unlocking the potential in your students"— Presentation transcript:

1 Unlocking the potential in your students
AP Potential Unlocking the potential in your students

2 What is AP Potential One data point
Uses three of the PSAT tests to predict the likelihood a student would be able to earn a 3 or better on an AP exam Provides resources to help notify students and parents of the potential.

3 Use reports as… A data point of readiness to engage in AP courses and honors courses A way to recruit students who are underrepresented in AP courses and honors courses A way to plan future AP Program growth Data to determine the need for teacher training Data to inform the need for pipeline courses to increase content preparation

4 Defining the Pool Schools should use AP Potential to identify and encourage students that may not otherwise be actively recruited for participation in AP, but that show a promise for succeeding in such courses. schools should start by generating a roster of students that have anywhere from a % likelihood of scoring 3 or higher. If the resulting list is larger than can be accommodated by a single section of an AP course, the school should consider adding sections and/or training additional teachers to offer the AP course. If the AP teacher has considerable experience and has a track record of helping a majority of her/his students score 3 or higher, the school should generate a roster of students with lower likelihood of scoring 3 or higher, out of recognition that the AP Potential predictions only account for a portion of the factors that contribute to the students' exam results, and that a good teacher can help students with lower statistical correlations achieve high performance on AP Exams.

5 https://epl.collegeboard.org/epl/login.do Get your access codes ready!
Accessing the Site Get your access codes ready!

6

7 Score Ranges for Tests

8 Mary Whitley Critical Reading Score: 53 Math Score: 49
Writing Score: 47 Mary takes her studies very seriously and wants to do well, but she sometimes she struggles a bit. Humanities courses do come easier to her than Math and Science; unfortunately, she loves science even though she has to work much harder to do well. She was thinking about taking an AP course- what would you recommend?

9 Sam Slacker Critical Reading: 68 Math: 72 Writing: 67
Sam lives up to his name! Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant, but relies on his smarts instead of hard work. His parents were interested in his taking an AP course- what would you recommend?

10 In consideration of freshman
“The ninth-grade students have not developed the writing skills and other skills that are essential to taking a college course,” Packer said. “It’s like speeding college up by four years rather than one or two years. We would prefer they would fund and focus efforts on the foundational skills that would prepare them for college-level course later on.”

11 Which Courses? When? Entry Level courses
Creating Pathways to build skills

12 Consider AP Chemistry What tests are indicators for this course?
What do those indicators tell us? Beginning in grade nine, what are the pipeline courses that will lead to potential success?

13 Creating a Pathway (Sample)
AP Chemistry Chemistry (Honors) Biology Environmental Science Statistics or Other Upper Level Math Course Common Core I and II preferably Honors Common Core III (Honors) English III (Honors or AP) English I and II preferably Honors

14 Building an AP Program Building the AP PLT
Shared Strategies Meeting the needs of a more diverse AP population- supports and structures Shared expectations Recruitment Strategies- timing is everything! Recruit for Honors and AP Think about targeting parents Building the Pipeline for Readiness Early entry into honors courses is critical!

15 Accessing AP Potential
Access the rosters Send letters Increase enrollment


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