<p>CB's head of the AP Program has a Twitter account where he's posting score distributions (I've seen Spanish Lit, Physics, Comp Sci, and others so far), updates from the AP Readings, and other updates.</p>
<p>So if you're interested: [url=<a href="http://twitter.com/#!/AP_Trevor%5DTwitter%5B/url">http://twitter.com/#!/AP_Trevor]Twitter[/url</a>]</p >
<p>What is the “No guessing penalty’s” impact on the distribution?</p>
<p>Thank you very much!</p>
<p>He really makes college board seem way less sinister.</p>
<p>Thanks for posting this; there are some interesting things on this.</p>
<p>One rather interesting post:
</p>
pokm12
June 17, 2011, 7:00pm
6
<p>I love this Twitter account.</p>
<p>Thanks so much for this!</p>
<p>Kudos for the find!</p>
<p>I think it would be pretty cool if someone could compile all of this into a easy-to-read list. or document. :D</p>
<p>@LoseYourself
I posted one on “The Official 2011 Wait for AP scores thread!” Thread.</p>
<p>Thanks for this!!!</p>
rococo
June 20, 2011, 11:11am
14
<p>Trevor Packer just posted the distributions for Calc AB and BC:</p>
<p>“AP Calculus AB performance is very similar to last year; BC performance is slightly worse. I’ll post the score distributions momentarily.”</p>
<p>“AP Calculus AB scores, 2011: 21.0% = 5; 16.3% = 4; 18.5% = 3; 10.8% = 2; 33.4% = 1. (These may shift slightly as late exams arrive.)”</p>
<p>“AP Calculus BC scores, 2011: 47.0% = 5; 16.3% = 4; 17.2% = 3; 5.9% = 2; 13.6% = 1. (These may shift slightly as late exams arrive.)”</p>
<p>“More than 1/2 the Calc AB students got 0 points on question 5, indicating a need for attn to differential equations w/in contextual problems.”</p>
rococo
June 20, 2011, 11:23am
15
<p>He also just posted the Psychology, Environmental Science, and Biology distributions! Stay tuned to his Twitter account!</p>
<p>lol I like this dude. Its nice to know there is an actual person behind college board. :P</p>
rococo
June 20, 2011, 12:24pm
17
<p>LOL me too! Look at this:</p>
<p>“AP Biology students did well on question 3 re: reproduction. Trying not to assume this is due to student fascination with the topic…”</p>
<p>bahahaha</p>
<p>
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<p>Man, this guy is actually kinda funny.</p>
<p>Haha
"AP Psychology scores, 2011: 20.2% = 5; 26.3% = 4; 19.8% = 3; 12.9% = 2; 20.8% = 1. (These may shift slightly as late exams arrive.)</p>
<p>Many AP Psychology students struggled with concepts of statistical significance & random assignment in question 1, so …"</p>
<p>I get it! :D</p>