Advanced Placement

College-level courses and examinations designed for motivated high school students.

Basic Concepts

Introduction to Advanced Placement

What is Advanced Placement?

Advanced Placement (AP) is a program created by the College Board that allows high school students to take college-level courses and exams. Succeeding in AP courses can earn you college credit, advanced placement, or both at many universities around the world.

Exploring the Benefits

  • Challenge yourself with rigorous academics.
  • Stand out in college applications.
  • Potentially save time and money in college by earning credits early.

How AP Works

Students choose from a variety of subjects—like AP Biology, AP Calculus, or AP U.S. History—then study the curriculum and take a standardized exam in May. Scores range from 1 to 5, with 3 or higher often considered passing.

Real-World Impact

AP courses teach time management, critical thinking, and study skills that are super useful in college and beyond!

Examples

  • A student takes AP Chemistry in high school and earns college credit after scoring a 4 on the exam.

  • Colleges may allow students who pass AP exams to skip introductory courses.

In a Nutshell

AP lets high schoolers take college-level courses and exams for potential credit.

Key Terms

College Board
An organization that designs AP courses and exams.
Credit
Recognition by colleges for completing course requirements.