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The first book to tell the story of the Advanced Placement program,
the gold standard for academic rigor in American high schools The
Advanced Placement program stands as the foremost source of
college-level academics for millions of high school students in the
United States and beyond. More than 22,000 schools now participate
in it, across nearly forty subjects, from Latin and art to calculus
and computer science. Yet remarkably little has been known about
how this nongovernmental program became one of the greatest success
stories in K-12 education-until now. In Learning in the Fast Lane,
Chester Finn and Andrew Scanlan, two of the country's most
respected education analysts, offer a groundbreaking account of one
of the most important educational initiatives of our time. Learning
in the Fast Lane traces the story of AP from its
mid-twentieth-century origins as a niche benefit for privileged
students to its emergence as a springboard to college for high
schoolers nationwide, including hundreds of thousands of
disadvantaged youth. Today, AP not only opens new intellectual
horizons for smart teenagers, but also strengthens school ratings,
attracts topflight teachers, and draws support from
philanthropists, reformers, and policymakers. At the same time, it
faces numerous challenges, including rival programs, curriculum
wars, charges of elitism, the misgivings of influential
universities, and the difficulty of infusing rigor into schools
that lack it. In today's polarized climate, can AP maintain its
lofty standards and surmount the problems that have sunk so many
other bold education ventures? Richly documented and thoroughly
accessible, Learning in the Fast Lane is a must-read for anyone
with a stake in the American school system.
The first book to tell the story of the Advanced Placement
program-the gold standard for academic rigor in U.S. high schools
and beyond The Advanced Placement program stands as the foremost
source of college-level academics for millions of high school
students in the United States and beyond. More than 22,000 schools
now participate in it, across nearly forty subjects, from Latin and
art to calculus and computer science. Yet remarkably little has
been known about how this nongovernmental program became one of the
greatest success stories in K-12 education-until now. In Learning
in the Fast Lane, Chester Finn and Andrew Scanlan, two of America's
most respected education analysts, offer a groundbreaking account
of one of the most important educational initiatives of our time.
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