![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The College Board, university admissions departments, and tiger moms have marketed AP courses with unmatched efficacy: 359,120 students took AP exams in 1990 compared to 2,825,710 students in 2019, for a 687% gain. Teachers, parents & administrators believe these courses represent the highest level of achievement at their school, and point only to the standardized exam as evidence of rigor. Speaking from personal experience, it is impossible to question the rigor of IB/DP, AP or favorite teacher-designed electives in Grades 11-12 without incurring the wrath of many adults. Unfortunately, this upper-secondary plateau has persisted for so long, and is so veiled by the prestige of the exam courses society craves, that it becomes a lightning rod in conversation. Instead, the approach serves as the next sorting mechanism because students’ survival of this transition period proves they “can handle” AP or IB/DP courses later in high school. I find there is truth to this, but not because these advanced courses are more authentically rigorous. In addition to lying to students about how well it prepares them for post-secondary endeavors, the volume-as-rigor approach fails to build lifelong learning dispositions by perverting the very process of learning itself. Rigor is more aptly characterized by the negotiation of complexity the analysis and evaluation of diverse viewpoints using evidence problem-solving with empathy in the face of uncertainty or designing for optimization. To whomever needs to hear this: doing more work per unit time may increase one’s efficiency, but has nothing to do with rigor. Unfortunately, this message about rigor is a lie. They learn to tolerate the volume and they carry the load throughout high school. Students willing to lose sleep, fight through the anxiety, and demonstrate compliance on every level are rewarded. Schools that house Honors and College Prep students in the same classroom justify the weighted status by adding more work to the higher level. The wildly inaccurate message sent to students is that rigor is a function of volume: the total number of pages of reading assigned, the length of the required research paper, the number of problems to solve. There is a steep slope of academic difficulty in Grade 9 and sometimes Grade 8, often traversing too much ground across too many skill sets and concepts in too short a timeframe. The next perversion of rigor plagues entire secondary programs and involves early transitions to upper/high school. Schools cannot track students and employ competency-based assessment without creating conflicting messages, pathways and incentives within their assessment system. Tracking is a well-known perversion of rigor and negates the growth model supported by competency-based assessment. and sometimes standardized entrance exams for high schools, which psychometrically include very large margins of error, and may even stunt intellectual development (research forthcoming!). teacher recommendations, which are inherently biased grades, which are inherently inaccurate and inconsistent across teachers In truth, most of the so-called honors math students at any school I’ve worked with seem to be unable to walk down the hall to science class and remember how to do unit conversions or basic dimensional analysis. This always amuses me, since we spend endless hours at EduChange incorporating applied math into our curriculum because students need more practice. The sorting process often begins in Grades 7-8, particularly in math classes, which then seems to dictate science course tracks. One perversion is the well-documented process of segregating students by tracking them into Honors, College Prep, Alternative and other designations. When I began to learn about the program of studies in secondary science in a small city in Massachusetts, a program I was hired to ‘reform,’ I saw various perversions of academic rigor that I would uncover again and again for the next two decades. ![]()
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