AP Italian Language and Culture
{{Short description|Advanced Placement course}}
{{Advanced Placement}}
Advanced Placement (AP) Italian Language and Culture (also known as AP Italian Language or AP Italian) is a course offered by the American College Board as part of the Advanced Placement Program. It is intended to give students a thorough background in the Italian language and Italian culture equivalent to a college-level course.
Due to low numbers of students taking AP Italian, it was temporarily discontinued after the 2008–2009 year.{{cite news|last=Staff|title=College Board Says, 'Arrivederci, AP Italian'|url=https://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-education/2009/01/09/college-board-says-arrivederci-ap-italian-.html|accessdate=14 November 2010|newspaper=U.S. News & World Report|date=9 January 2009|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101105203351/http://www.usnews.com/blogs/on-education/2009/01/09/college-board-says-arrivederci-ap-italian-.html|archivedate=5 November 2010|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}} On July 3, 2008, The Italian Language Foundation was established to support Italian language education and the AP Italian program.{{cite web|url=http://www.italianlanguagefoundation.org/history.html |title=History of the AP Italian Program |publisher=Italian Language Foundation |accessdate=14 November 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101224020403/http://www.italianlanguagefoundation.org/history.html |archivedate=24 December 2010 }} On November 10, 2010, the College Board announced that the program would be reinstated in the fall of 2011, with the first AP Italian Exam scheduled for May 2012.{{cite news|last=Lewin|first=Tamar|title=Italian Studies Regains Spot on the List of AP Courses|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/education/11italian.html|accessdate=14 November 2010|newspaper=New York Times|date=10 November 2010}}
Course content
The AP Italian Language and Culture course focuses on developing students' reading, writing, listening, and speaking skills, all framed in order to reflect the richness of Italian language and culture. Teachers of the course will interweave the language structure with cultural content.
The examination
The examination tests students' abilities to successfully use three modes of communication: interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational. The five ultimate goals of the exam are communication, culture, connections, comparisons, and community.
Grade distribution
class="wikitable"
!Score |
|5
|15.3% |17.9% |22.6% |20.4% |20.7% |20.8% |22.4% |18.4% |18.5% |13.6% |18.5% |20.6% |22.6% |23.2% |20% |
---|
|4
|12.7% |14.1% |23.7% |20.9% |20.6% |20.1% |18.8% |19.1% |18.1% |18.1% |16.8% |22.6% |20.6% |22.8% |22% |
|3
|23.9% |23.9% |28.1% |28.8% |28.3% |27.4% |30.9% |34.0% |32.0% |34.4% |40.1% |29.2% |27.3% |26.9% |29% |
|2
|20.0% |20.3% |19.5% |22.9% |22.0% |22.7% |19.9% |22.4% |21.4% |24.6% |19.5% |18.6% |18.6% |17.1% |18% |
|1
|28.0% |23.8% |6.1% |6.9% |8.4% |9.1% |8.1% |6.1% |10.0% |9.3% |5.1% |9.0% |10.8% |10.1% |11% |
|% of scores 3 or higher
|52.0% |55.9% |74.4% |70.2% |69.6% |68.2% |72.1% |71.5% |68.6% |66.1% |75.4% |72.4% |70.5% |72.9% |71% |
|Mean
|2.67 |2.82 |3.37 |3.25 |3.23 |3.21 |3.27 |3.21 |3.14 |3.02 |3.24 |3.27 |3.26 |3.22 |3.22 |
|Standard deviation
|1.40 |1.41 |1.20 |1.21 |1.24 |1.26 |1.24 |1.16 |1.23 |1.16 |1.12 |1.23 |1.29 |1.28 |1.26 |
Number of Students
|1,642 |2,282 |1,806 |1,980 |2,331 |2,573 |2,774 |2,571 |2,926 |2,658 |2,518 |2,102 |2,194 |2,034 | |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://apcentral.collegeboard.org/courses/ap-italian-language-and-culture AP Italian Language and Culture Course Home Page at CollegeBoard.com]
{{College Board}}
Category:Italian language tests
Category:Italian-language education
Category:Italian language in the United States
{{US-edu-stub}}