This info is out of date for the Physics C exams, which are now all 3 hours each for the E&M and Mechanics portions. |
| Meh, my kid took US Hist. in the morning, had a quick break, Macro in the afternoon, then grabbed a quick snack and jumped on the bus to head off to an intense baseball game. And then went out later that night! Unless you have accommodations, there is no reason why a young, energetic high school kid can't take two in one day. |
Not only is it out of date, but it's inaccurate for all of the exams that have a speaking portion (music theory and most foreign language ones). The total testing time might be less than 3 hours, but the kids have to sit separately for the speaking parts, often one at a time. Music theory might have 2 hrs 40 minutes of actual testing time, but in practice it usually runs 3.5 hours or more. Yesterday, the Spanish one ran over 4 hours at my kid's school. |
Also, Psychology is now 2 hrs and 40 minutes, US Government is 3 hours, and Computer Science Principles is 3 hrs. They're all 10 minutes more than that if the school gives the break that they're supposed to give between the MCQ and FRQ sections. |
The College Board mandates that morning exams start between 8 and 9 am, and afternoon exams start between 12 and 1 pm. It’s possible to get 1.5-2 hours between tests if the morning one starts at 8 and the afternoon one starts at 1, but many schools start the afternoon tests at noon so that they finish up closer to the usual end of the school day. |
Yes - and because the College Board provides a 3-5 hour block for tests that can take 2 hours to over 4 hours sometimes students don’t get adequate time between tests — even tho it’s theoretically possible and a minimum of a 20 min break is mandated between tests. Sounds like some AP Coordinators are better than others at helping students with this. What if College Board just formalized what some schools and parents already do informally — allow students to pick from one of two testing days for their test? That way students could address the potential overlap issue created from having two tests scheduled for one day and also provide options for managing conflicting demands. |
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My AP Exam Coordinator just told me "College Board does not have a policy requiring a minimum break period between two different AP exams for standard-time students. The 10-minute break requirement applies between sections on a single exam."
I think she's right. I can't find a College Board policy that describes their intention for the time between two tests. I'm also thinking this impacts a good number of kids each year who have to rush between tests without clarity on break or timing, so I'm beginning to think it's negligence that College Board has set it up this way with the hope the schools just make it work and students (and parents) don't complain. |
The logistics are up to the school, within the scheduling parameters set by the College Board (morning exams must start between 8 and 9, afternoon exams between noon and 1). There would be no issues if school scheduled later start times within the window for the second exam, so the school is who you need to complain to. |