Cramming for the AP exam ruined his U.S. history course, writes AP drop-out Tom Stanley-Becker in the Los Angeles Times.
The problem with the AP program is that we don’t have time to really learn U.S. history because we’re preparing for the exam. We race through the textbook, cramming in the facts, a day on the Great Awakening, a week on the Civil War and Reconstruction, a week on World War II, a week on the era from FDR to JFK, a day on the civil rights movement—with nothing on transcendentalism, or the Harlem Renaissance, or Albert Einstein. There is no time to write a paper.
Without the pressure of the AP course, Stanley-Becker is doing independent research, he writes, “reading the words of George Kennan, Lillian Hellman, Harry Truman and Paul Robeson for a paper I’m writing on the Cold War.” How many AP drop-outs have the opportunity and motivation to do that, as opposed to taking an easier, textbook-zipping U.S. history class?
When I took U.S. history in eighth grade, there was, of course, less U.S. history. But we still ran out of time at the Depression. World War II was a day, not a week. The Cold War shared a day with the review for the final. I took AP history in high school and remember it very fondly. We had time to discuss ideas — though we ran out of time at the Depression, just like in eighth grade. All we knew about World War II was who won. Us!
AP (and IB) courses “dazzle” when compared to the usual alternatives, writes Liam Julian on Flypaper. But they don’t satisfy students who want to think deeply about what they’re studying. Eric Osberg counters that his AP U.S. history class featured discussions and essays — because they’d taken a survey class the year before.
I wonder if there’s more fact cramming now because AP students start with less basic knowledge. Or maybe there are more questions on 20th-century history.





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