Anonymous wrote:"You can't force AP math (the only AP math classes are calculus and statistics) because neither calculus or statistics are required to graduate & most kids don't take them...everyone has to take junior year English and junior year US history so you have a situation where there's basically segregated classes based on who is taking the AP vs non-AP classes. Wilson is trying to address this by requiring everyone to take the AP classes."
How are they ensuring that everyone is prepared for AP math? What are they going to do when the less prepared kids all fail AP math?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?
Not sure what you mean by Wilson being "singled out." There is no evidence that this was foisted upon the school by DCPC--rather, the Wilson principal has decided to do this based on equity concerns and a belief that the students and community at large want to pursue anti-racist policies.
all students who want to take an AP class now can take it. how is this racist? if forcing students to sign up for a AP class is ant-racist, then why just AP English and not AP math? is there an assumption that minority students are not good at math?
You can't force AP math (the only AP math classes are calculus and statistics) because neither calculus or statistics are required to graduate & most kids don't take them...everyone has to take junior year English and junior year US history so you have a situation where there's basically segregated classes based on who is taking the AP vs non-AP classes. Wilson is trying to address this by requiring everyone to take the AP classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?
Not sure what you mean by Wilson being "singled out." There is no evidence that this was foisted upon the school by DCPC--rather, the Wilson principal has decided to do this based on equity concerns and a belief that the students and community at large want to pursue anti-racist policies.
all students who want to take an AP class now can take it. how is this racist? if forcing students to sign up for a AP class is ant-racist, then why just AP English and not AP math? is there an assumption that minority students are not good at math?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?
Not sure this totally answers your question, but other high schools in the city (with the exception of Banneker and SWW) don't have nearly as many AP class offerings.
And for PPs asking for data points, I am a former Wilson parent and the principal has given multiple presentations about the progress of the program. One presentation I attended the program DID close some of the gaps and it definitely captured students that should've been in AP classes all along. I don't think any of this information is some big secret, in fact some of it used to be on Wilson's website. If folks really care to know, instead of griping on this site how about asking the principal/admin for the information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I must be missing something, but why is AP the end all be all? Many people might not want to take a class so focused on a single text and a curriculum that teaches to the test. It sounds awful not to have other choices.
As several PP teachers noted in this thread, there are many ways to teach an AP class (same with IB, in fact). Ask anyone who tutors students from more than one school in the same AP classes: they are not using identical course descriptions or teaching methods. Some schools may "teach to the test" and you might as well just buy the Princeton Review, but that is a pretty rare (and lazy) approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?
Not sure this totally answers your question, but other high schools in the city (with the exception of Banneker and SWW) don't have nearly as many AP class offerings.
And for PPs asking for data points, I am a former Wilson parent and the principal has given multiple presentations about the progress of the program. One presentation I attended the program DID close some of the gaps and it definitely captured students that should've been in AP classes all along. I don't think any of this information is some big secret, in fact some of it used to be on Wilson's website. If folks really care to know, instead of griping on this site how about asking the principal/admin for the information?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?
Not sure what you mean by Wilson being "singled out." There is no evidence that this was foisted upon the school by DCPC--rather, the Wilson principal has decided to do this based on equity concerns and a belief that the students and community at large want to pursue anti-racist policies.
Anonymous wrote:Why is "AP for all" mandated only at Wilson? If it's good policy, then shouldn't ALL students across DCPS be placed in AP classes as the mainstream courses of study? If not, what's so special about Wilson that it is being singled out?