ADVANCED PLACEMENT (AP) ENGLISH
| Purpose / Overview | An Advanced Placement course in English Language Arts is intended to provide the equivalent in content and difficulty of a college-level introductory English course. The College Board offers programs in both AP English Language and Composition and in AP English Literature and Composition. Students who choose to enroll in either course may opt to take an AP examination to validate their academic experience and to receive college credit as determined by individual institutions of higher education. However, students who take the course are not required to take the examination unless a local system chooses to require AP testing. Participation in an AP course often ensures more thorough preparation for the AP examination, but students are not required to take the course before taking the examination. Colleges and universities reserve the right to determine if students will be awarded college credit for their performance on the examination. Educators, students, and parents should refer to College Board resources to facilitate preparation for or participation in Advanced Placement Language or Literature courses. While no official AP teacher certification is issued by the College Board or by the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, the College Board recommends that instructors complete an AP Institute or workshop to prepare for teaching an AP course. Individual school systems may also have developed their own requirements and expectations regarding teacher preparation and continued professional development. Educators seeking additional information on courses, materials, and/or professional development should refer to the College Board web site: http://apcentral.collegeboard.com. Students and parents may visit www.collegeboard.com/apstudents for additional information. With permission of the College Board, the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction has created course standards that reflect both the expectations of the College Board and the philosophy and format of the North Carolina Standard Course of Study (SCS). However, these course outlines are not intended to replace the extensive guidelines provided by the College Board in AP course description books (often referred to as the acorn books) for each subject. Since the College Board frequently revises recommended topics and required skills, AP teachers should obtain and follow the current course descriptions for their courses. |
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| Connections | As a part of the High School English Language Arts Program, these courses promote an integrated approach to the strands of oral language, written language, and other media/technology. Moreover, the courses are aligned to the goals of secondary (6-12) English Language Arts, with students involved in different communication environments, based on purpose, audience, and context. (For more information about the philosophy underlying the High School English Language Arts Program, please see pp. 7-16 and pp. 71-80 of the North Carolina English Language Arts Standard Course of Study or visit http://www.ncpublicschools.org/curriculum/languagearts/scos/ ). | ||||||||||||||||||
| Options for Implementation | Currently, schools and systems throughout North Carolina approach AP English Language Arts courses in different ways. According to the College Board, Because the AP course depends on the development of interpretive skills as students learn to write and read with increasing complexity and sophistication, the AP course is intended to be a full-year course. Teachers at schools that offer only a single semester block for AP are encouraged to advise their students to take an additional semester of advanced English in which they continue to practice the kind of writing and reading emphasized in the AP class. (AP course description books for AP English Language and Composition and AP English Literature and Composition, available from http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/courses/descriptions/ ) In light of this recommendation and the numbers of systems who currently use the 4X4 block schedule, these courses have been designed to stand alone as electives that would be taken in addition to the graduation requirements of English I, II, III, and IV. However, local systems may choose to combine a required course (English III or English IV) with an AP course, as long as the standards for both courses are met. AP English courses may not be taken in lieu of any required English course. Allowing such a choice preserves the prerogatives of local systems to offer courses designed to meet the needs of their particular students and situations. The chart below offers a summary and some additional information about the differences between the courses:
Additional resources for both the separate and combined courses will be developed to support teachers. Determining which approach (separate AP electives or combined English / AP courses) best fits a particular school or system will require consideration of the specific needs, goals, and resources of the local district and population. The following questions may help guide discussions:
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ADVANCED PLACEMENT ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND COMPOSITION
Students in Advanced Placement English Language and Composition will become skilled readers of prose written in a variety of periods, disciplines, and rhetorical contexts and skilled writers who compose for a variety of purposes. Both their writing and their reading should make students aware of the interactions among a writer's purposes, audience expectations, and subjects as well as the way generic conventions and the resources of language contribute to effectiveness in writing.
| Competency Goal 1 | The learner will react to a variety of texts and media by drawing upon personal experiences, readings, and observations. |
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1.01 Draw upon personal experiences, readings, and observations
by:
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| Competency Goal 2 | The learner will use inquiry and research to inform an audience about complex subjects. |
2.01 Research and synthesize information by:
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| Competency Goal 3 | The learner will create and sustain arguments based on readings, research, observations and personal experiences. |
3.01 Understand argumentative structure by:
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| Competency Goal 4 | The learner will analyze prose written in a variety of periods, disciplines, and rhetorical contexts. |
4.01 Determine the author's intent/argument by:
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| Competency Goal 5 | The learner will develop a deeper understanding of representative literature with a specific emphasis on non-fiction. |
5.01 Explore texts by:
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| Competency Goal 6 | The learner will demonstrate understanding and mastery of standard written English and exhibit stylistic maturity. |
6.01 Demonstrate an understanding of the conventions of language
by:
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ADVANCED PLACEMENT ENGLISH LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION
Students in Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition will engage in the careful reading and critical analysis of imaginative literature. Through the close reading of selected texts, students should deepen their understanding of the ways writers use language to provide both meaning and pleasure to their readers. As they read, students should consider a work's structure, style, and themes as well as such smaller-scale elements as the use of figurative language, imagery, symbolism, and tone.
| Competency Goal 1 | The learner will reflect on and express reactions to print and non-print resources. |
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1.01 Compose reflective texts to:
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| Competency Goal 2 | The learner will inform an audience by exploring literature to explain its artistry and its underlying social and cultural values. |
2.01 Locate, process, and comprehend texts that:
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| Competency Goal 3 | The learner will develop an argument which addresses and assesses the human condition through a study of universal themes. |
3.01 Recognize and define universally relevant issues by:
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| Competency Goal 4 | The learner will explore and provide critical perspectives through deliberate and thorough analysis, interpretation, and evaluation of text. |
4.01 Develop organized critical analyses with focus and support
to:
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| Competency Goal 5 | The learner will engage in an intensive study of representative works of recognized literary merit from various genres and time periods with a strong focus on the 16th through the 21st century. |
5.01 Demonstrate an understanding of literary works by:
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| Competency Goal 6 | The learner will demonstrate understanding and mastery of standard written English and exhibit stylistic maturity. |
6.01 Demonstrate an understanding of the conventions of language
by:
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