Placentia-Yorba Linda high schools set records for AP, IB testing; individual campus results listed
Several
records were set by the hundreds of students at the Placentia-Yorba
Linda school district's four comprehensive high schools who took
Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate examinations
earlier this year.
Scores
earned by these students maintained a years-long district tradition
of administering more tests to more students with a higher percentage
of students earning passing scores at most high school sites.
Students
earning passing or better scores on the 38 examinations in the
Advanced Placement program can earn university-level credits and
often bypass introductory courses, although each individual
institution makes its own decisions on credit and placement options.
This
year, 4,070 AP tests were administered district-wide over a 14-day
period in May, up from last year's 3,890. The district pass rate is
83.4 percent, with passing considered to be a score of “3” or
better on a five-point scale on tests taken by 9th through
12th grade students.
Here's
how the individual high schools fared:
--At
El Dorado High School, the number of tests administered jumped from
707 last year to 810 this year, with the Hawk pass rate edging up
from 75.67 percent to 76.3 percent.
--At
Esperanza High School, the number of tests administered increased
from 646 last year to 710 this year, but the Aztec pass rate declined
from 80.03 percent to 76.34 percent.
--At
Valencia High School, the number of tests administered increased from
1,469 last year to 1,565 this year, with the Tiger pass rate
advancing from 85.98 percent to 86.77 percent.
--At
Yorba Linda High School, the number of tests administered declined
from 1,068 last year to 985 this year, with the Mustang pass rate
increasing from 87.36 percent to 89.04 percent.
California's
statewide pass rate is about 64 percent, while the global rate hovers
at 61 percent.
Many
students take more than one test each year, and several students who
have taken a dozen or more tests through four years of high school
begin college careers with sophomore standing. Each test costs $93,
but limited-income households pay $5 per test.
The
International Baccalaureate program at Valencia High School also set
records, including an all-time high of 530 tests taken in 21
subjects, up from 471 exams in 19 subjects last year. The school's
pass rate was 95 percent, with 503 tests earning a “4” or higher
on a seven-point scale.
This
year, 76 students earned IB's full-diploma, up from 64 last year and
41 the year before. “We expect about 90” for next year, stated
Fred Jenkins, program coordinator. The school's pass rate for
students who attempt and successfully complete the full-diploma is 91
percent; the global rate is 79.3 percent.
Jenkins
said he anticipates 185 freshmen, 149 sophomores, 106 juniors and 95
seniors in the IB program when school opens Aug. 29. Both AP and IB
students completed reading, essay and other assignments over the
summer.
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