Saturday, June 20, 2020
Frederick Douglass PSAT passage discussed on the College Board website - before the PSAT
This is another little oddity I came across on the College Board website. While poking around, trying to find information about the connection between the College Board andà The Atlanticà in an attempt to explain why the latter was publishing falseà information about the SAT, I ended up on theà AP US History (APUSH) professional developmentà page specifically the section devoted to teaching using historical documents to teach close reading and analytical writing.à Id heard about the controversy surrounding the redesigned AP test, and I was curious just what the College Board was preaching à to teachers in terms of how to prepare students for the new exam. Although I probably shouldnt be surprised by these things anymore, I was aà bit taken aback by the multiple-choice check for understanding questions. The page is, after all, designed for adult professionals, a reasonable number of whom hold graduate degrees; for those of you who dont care to read, lets just say its not exactly what anyone would call a sophisticated pedagogical approach.à What really shockedà me, however, was this video of a model AP classroom, in which a group of students discuss a primary source document aboutâ⬠¦ you guessed it, Frederick Douglass and the 4th of July.à Based on everything Ive heard about the PSAT, this was almost certainlyà the same passage that appeared on that test.à While the video must haveà made a while ago to coincide with the first administration of the new APUSH exam the students featured in it are presumably wellà past the point of taking the PSAT theres still something not quite kosher about the College Board swearing students to secrecy about the content of an exam when content from that exam wasà presented on its website (albeit in a section students are exceedingly unlikely to find on their own) before the exam was even administered.à It also got me wonderingà whether passages (founding documents or otherwise) that will appear on the new SAT are already presented or alluded toà elsewhere on the College Boards website. In particular,à at the possibility that the founding documents that appear on the SAT will simply be chosen from among the key APUSH primary source documents. Assuming that the Official Guide is accurate, there will be non-American documents as well, but it seems like a reasonable assumption that many of the documents will issue from that list.à Again, something seems a little off here. This is a list intended forà APUSHà classes; surely there are many US history classes across the country that will not have such a heavy focus on primary-source documents.à If the students who read these documents in school prior to encountering them on the SATà are primarily APUSH students, where does that leave everyone else? Even a strong reader is at a disadvantage if he or sheà has limited knowledge of a topic, and most students are not exactly racingà home after school and reading Frederick Douglass for fun. à You cannot create an internationally administeredà exam that is given to students following every sort of curriculum imaginable and then claim is is somehow aligned with what students are doing in school. Rather, it is aligned or intended to be aligned with what someà studentsà doing in school.à Exactly howà is that supposed to make things more equitable?
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