<p>How about other ones, apbioinformer??</p>
<p>Wow…79%. That’s rough. Does anyone have a link or a file of that summary?</p>
<p>@wlsnehf what do you mean by other ones?</p>
<p>@wynter it was posted by the AP Biology Teacher Community Mod. on a discussion board, so it’s not a pdf.</p>
<p>Would you mind copying and sending it to me via pm, or is that some sort of breach of community rules? If so, don’t worry about it.</p>
<p>I need to get to 15 posts</p>
<p>This is not my real cc account</p>
<p>I do not want to be banned/tracked on my real account</p>
<p>So I’m just posting until I get there</p>
<p>Sorry about that :D</p>
<p>From the College Board:</p>
<p>2013 AP Biology Exam Results</p>
<p>The AP Biology course and exam were redesigned to provide a learning experience that improves readiness for college placement and credit, focused on both the content and the skills (quantitative, laboratory, etc.) most higher education institutions are expecting students to know and be able to do to merit exemption from the introductory college biology course.</p>
<p>In the past, the AP Biology course lacked specificity about the exact tasks students would be required to perform with their biological content knowledge. Accordingly, teachers felt tremendous pressure to cover all possible topics within a college-level biology textbook, and many felt they had to sacrifice in-depth study of key concepts and the development of students’ ability to perform the mathematics, experimental design, and analysis skills essential to science majors and careers. In fact, across all AP subjects, AP Biology teachers reported the lowest levels of satisfaction with the breadth/depth balance of their course.</p>
<p>On June 18–19, college professors and AP teachers from a range of institutions convened to review each of the redesigned AP Biology Exam questions, and 1,182 college students’ performance on such questions. The college students’ responses to the AP exam questions were scored alongside AP students’ exams at this year’s AP Biology Reading. Using an established standard-setting methodology (known as modified Angoff), and basing their judgments on achievement level descriptions grounded in the redesigned AP Biology program’s required content and skills, the panelists reached consensus on the number of points needed for each AP score of 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.</p>
<p>Multiple-Choice Results</p>
<p>Educators and students had reported perceptions that the multiple-choice section was easy, that it did not require content knowledge, or that it was a test of reading comprehension. None of these perceptions proved accurate. The panelists who took the exam themselves felt that the questions effectively balanced required content knowledge with fundamental quantitative, analysis, experimental design, and data interpretation skills. Student performance does not indicate that the section was easy. In fact, the results show that AP Biology students on average are not yet performing as well as college students on such tasks.</p>
<p>On the multiple-choice and grid-in questions, AP Biology students scored, on average, 61% correct.</p>
<p>By way of comparison, the mean score on the “old” AP Biology Exam (2012) multiple-choice section was 63% correct.</p>
<p>Other details on this year’s multiple-choice section:</p>
<p>123 students (out of 189,982) answered all multiple-choice questions, including the grid-ins, correctly.</p>
<p>Eleven questions focused on content from Big Idea 1. The average score on these questions was 64% correct.</p>
<p>Twenty-one questions focused on content from Big Idea 2. The average score on these questions was 60% correct.</p>
<p>Fourteen questions focused on content from Big Idea 3. The average score on these questions was 55% correct.</p>
<p>Thirteen questions focused on content from Big Idea 4. The average score on these questions was 65% correct.</p>
<p>Eighteen questions required application of Science Practice 1. The average score on these questions was 61% correct.</p>
<p>Four questions required application of Science Practice 2. The average score on these questions was 48% correct.</p>
<p>Four questions required application of Science Practice 3. The average score on these questions was 61% correct.</p>
<p>Five questions required application of Science Practice 4. The average score on these questions was 62% correct.</p>
<p>Eight questions required application of Science Practice 5. The average score on these questions was 63% correct.</p>
<p>Eighteen questions required application of Science Practice 6. The average score on these questions was 63% correct.</p>
<p>Ten questions required application of Science Practice 7. The average score on these questions was 56% correct.</p>
<p>Twenty-one questions were lab sets. The average score on these questions was 63% correct.</p>
<p>Grid-In Questions</p>
<p>Five questions in a new grid-in question type required students to meet college biology’s standards for use of mathematics to solve biological problems and understand biological concepts.</p>
<p>The performance of AP Biology students on these questions was very low, with an average correct score of just 36%.</p>
<p>Some have asked whether the length of the exam or uncertainty about whether to proceed to these questions impacted these results. We examined these possibilities closely and found no evidence of any impacts. AP Biology students completed the exam at rates consistent with prior years. A persistent misunderstanding has been that the exam contained a stop sign at the bottom of the page prior to the grid-in questions. That is not the case. There was no stop sign on the page. The exact directions were: “End of Part A. Do not stop. Go on to Part B.” Moreover, we found that students completed the 5 grid-in questions at the same rate as a control group of students who piloted the exam and were given the signal of an arrow at the bottom of the page. To reduce any risk of student confusion, we will stress the need to turn the page in future exams, but the evidence shows that there was no negative effect on student completion rates for these questions this year.</p>
<p>Specific details about student performance on the grid-ins:</p>
<p>7.5% of students answered all 5 grid-ins correctly</p>
<p>11.7% of students answered 4 grid-ins correctly</p>
<p>14.3% of students answered 3 grid-ins correctly</p>
<p>16.1% of students answered 2 grid-ins correctly</p>
<p>18.7% of students answered 1 grid-in correctly</p>
<p>31.7% of students answered 0 grid-ins correctly</p>
<p>Free-Response Questions</p>
<p>Each free-response question was aligned to multiple learning objectives. These multiple alignments provided students with an expanded opportunity to demonstrate knowledge and application of the science practices within the free-response section of the exam.</p>
<p>Question 1: Fruit fly behavior</p>
<p>Out of 10 points possible, the average was low: 3.6. Only 2.5% of all AP Biology students earned more than 7 points on this question. This question measured Learning Objectives 2.21, 2.23, 2.24, 2.38, 3.40, 3.41, 3.44, 3.45, 3.46, 4.14, and 4.16.</p>
<p>Question 2: Photosynthetic pigments</p>
<p>Out of 10 points possible, the average was low: 3.7. While 17.9% of AP Biology students earned more than 7 points on this question, 21% were unable even to earn a single point on it. This question measured Learning Objectives 1.2, 1.12, 1.13, 1.25, 2.24, 2.5, 4.4, 4.5, and 4.6.</p>
<p>Question 3: Transitional species</p>
<p>Out of 4 points possible, the average was 2.55 (63% of points possible for this question). Many students did well on this question: 13% earned all 4 points, and 43.3% earned 3 points. 8% earned 0 points. This question measured Learning Objectives 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, and 1.12.</p>
<p>Question 4: Carbon cycle</p>
<p>Out of 4 points possible, the average was 1.64 (41% of the points possible for this question). 28.9% of AP students earned 0 points. 13.4% of AP students earned all 4 points. This question measured Learning Objectives 1.15, 2.5, 2.9, 4.6, and 4.15.</p>
<p>Question 5: Polypeptide comparisons</p>
<p>Out of 4 points possible, the average was just 1.18 (30% of the points possible for this question). 44.9% of AP students earned 0 points. 8.2% of AP students earned all 4 points. This question measured Learning Objectives 3.26, 4.1, and 4.3.</p>
<p>Question 6: Organelles in different cell types</p>
<p>This question, highly regarded by colleges as a measure of Learning Objectives 2.5 and 4.6, had the lowest performance of any of the free-response questions. The average was 0.69 on the 3-point rubric (23% of the points possible for this question). 49.4% of students earned 0 of the 3 points possible, and just 2.1% of AP students earned all 3 points.</p>
<p>Question 7: Effect of alcohol on urine production</p>
<p>This question had the highest performance of any of the free-response questions. Out of 3 points possible, the average was 2.19 (73% of the points possible for this question). 58.6% of students earned all 3 points possible, and 13.5% earned 0 points. This question measured Learning Objectives 2.10, 2.22, 2.23, 2.24, 2.25, 4.8, and 4.14.</p>
<p>Question 8: Hormone-signaling pathway</p>
<p>Out of 3 points possible, the average was 0.9 (30% of the points possible for this question). 53.5% of students earned 0 points on this question. 13.8% of students earned all 3 points possible. This question measured Learning Objectives 3.22 and 3.23.</p>
<p>The low student performance, in general, on most of the free-response questions had a significant impact on this year’s AP scores.</p>
<p>AP Biology Score Distribution:</p>
<p>The standard setting panel, comprised of 10 college professors and 6 AP Biology teachers, reviewed each multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response question on the exam to determine what level of student performance on each question is required for AP scores of 2, 3, 4, and 5.</p>
<p>To receive an AP score of 5, the panelists found that students should earn a minimum of 78 total raw score points across the multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response questions.</p>
<p>So to earn an AP score of 5, a student would, for example, need to answer 47 out of 58 multiple-choice and grid-in questions correctly and 31 points across the 8 free-response questions. (To earn 31 points on the free-response section, one possible combination is: 8/10, 8/10, 3/4, 3/4, 3/4, 2/3, 2/3, and 2/3.)</p>
<p>Given the critical knowledge and skills measured on each of the free-response sections, and their tight alignment to the AP Biology Learning Objectives, we are confident educators will agree with the panelists’ (both college professors’ and AP teachers’) insistence that a minimum of 78 points should be required for AP students to receive a score of 5.</p>
<p>To receive an AP score of 4, the panelists found that students should earn a minimum of 64 total raw score points across the multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response questions.</p>
<p>To receive an AP score of 3, the panelists found that students should earn a minimum of 45 total raw score points across the multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response questions.</p>
<p>To receive an AP score of 2, the panelists found that students should earn a minimum of 26 total raw score points across the multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response questions.</p>
<p>The resulting AP Biology score distribution for 2013 is:</p>
<p>AP Score</p>
<p>Raw Points</p>
<p>Required (out of 99)</p>
<p>Percentage of AP Bio Students in 2013</p>
<p>5</p>
<p>78</p>
<p>5.4</p>
<p>4</p>
<p>64</p>
<p>21.4</p>
<p>3</p>
<p>45</p>
<p>36.3</p>
<p>2</p>
<p>26</p>
<p>29.5</p>
<p>1</p>
<p>7.4</p>
<p>Reflections:</p>
<p>AP Biology teachers are doing tremendous work to help their students develop the knowledge and skills essential to success in biology majors and careers, and measured by the multiple-choice, grid-in, and free-response questions on the redesigned AP Biology Exam. In many instances, AP Biology teachers are receiving students who have spent years in science classrooms that never moved beyond rapid coverage of textbook content, with very little understanding or retention of such information. The work needed to improve student learning of biology is made visible by very low scores on most of the AP Biology grid-in and free-response questions – the questions that require students to perform mathematics and describe, explain, and predict fundamental biological principles and outcomes. Many incoming AP Biology students have never been taught or required to demonstrate the quantitative, analytic, and interpretive skills now required, so struggled on the redesigned AP Biology exam.</p>
<p>College faculty who participated in the AP Biology standard setting agree that their own students are similarly challenged, and that the redesigned AP Biology program is the new gold standard, one that gives them confidence that AP students earning qualifying exam scores deserve placement and will be much better prepared for science majors than students who take their own colleges’ introductory biology courses. The college faculty participating on the panel sang the praises of AP teachers for teaching a course that is now an exemplar for college-level introductory biology.</p>
<p>The small percentage of students demonstrating performance needed for a score of 5 signals a need in particular to help students improve their performance on the grid-in and free-response questions. To earn a 5, students must learn the course content well enough to be able to perform the skills required in the grid-ins and the free-response section: when confronted with scientific data or evidence illustrative of the required course content, students must be able to “calculate,” “predict,” “justify,” “propose,” “explain,” “perform,” “specify,” “identify,” “describe,” “pose a scientific question,” and “state a hypothesis.” True understanding requires that students develop the depth of understanding required to perform such tasks with accuracy and precision.</p>
<p>To help teachers cultivate such abilities among their students, we will provide examples of what is expected when a student is asked to perform the tasks required by AP Biology. We plan to release these examples alongside the scoring guidelines in August so that teachers can show their students clearly what sort of evidence of understanding each task requires of them. In addition, we will release a full AP Biology Exam this fall, with each question coded to the Learning Objective(s) it measures. We will release a full AP Biology Exam each year thereafter. These will typically be the international form of the exam, which is the final use of the form before it is made public.</p>
<p>The AP Biology Development Committee, comprised of expert AP Biology teachers and college professors, is also committed to continuous refinement of the Learning Objectives in order to find additional ways for reducing breadth and enabling teachers to focus their instructional time on helping students develop the ability to calculate, explain, describe, and predict with accuracy. Now that the redesign has taken effect, the committee will look for opportunities to make incremental changes, which will always be communicated to AP teachers in the summer before the academic year begins, to help teachers focus their efforts. Such incremental changes will not require teachers to submit their syllabi for review or to receive additional professional development, but can help AP Biology teachers hone and focus their instruction.</p>
<p>We encourage AP Biology teachers to take heart and recognize that shifting years of students’ prior ways of learning science can take time. But what the AP teaching community has shown, year after year, is that they can meet and exceed the standards required of colleges for credit and placement. More importantly, AP Biology teachers are transforming the depth of science understanding and skills when in classrooms worldwide they shift the focus of classroom instruction away from rapid content coverage to help students learn to explain and describe their understanding of science content, and to design and conduct laboratory and mathematical tasks essential to understanding natural phenomena. If a student cannot perform such tasks, the research consistently shows that they will not retain or use the knowledge they have learned in AP Biology, and will be insufficiently prepared for much of what they will be required to do in science majors. Hats off to the AP Biology teaching community for the tremendous change you are seeking to effect in your students’ understanding of biology.</p>
<p>So they give scores based on the “raw score” not the composite score?</p>
<p>It would appear they did not even convert to composite score - I am led to believe that the multiple-choice counted more, no?</p>
<p>Of course there were questions about this, so the community mod asked cb the weighting, and they replied that both were weighted equally using a multiplier that gave both 60 points toward a 120 point composite score. I am still wondering, then, why they gave a chart with raw score if they used a multiplier. Will report back if I find anything.</p>
<p>Got a reply from CB. Also keep in mind that the mc had 10 field tested items and one of the grid-ins was a field-test item.In response to the questions about the weighting of the exam:Yes, the multiple-choice and free-response sections are each weighted to contribute 50% toward the total composite score.Each of the 58 raw points possible in the multiple-choice section is weighted at 1.0344 so that the multiple-choice section contributes up to 60 weighted points toward the students composite score.Each of the 41 raw points possible within the 8 free-response questions is weighted as follows, so that the free-response section contributes up to 60 weighted points toward the students composite score:FRQ 1 and FRQ 2: Each have 10 raw points possible that are weighted at 1.5 each so that FRQ1 and FRQ2 total 30 weighted points toward the students composite score.FRQ 3, FRQ 4, and FRQ 5: Each have 4 raw points possible that are weighted at 1.4285 each so that these 3 FRQs total 17.142 weighted points toward the students composite score.FRQ 6, FRQ 7, and FRQ 8: Each have 3 raw points possible that are weighted at 1.4285 each so that these 3 FRQs total 12.8565 weighted points toward the students composite score.We felt it would be most helpful to teachers to show the un-weighted raw points required for each AP grade of 2, 3, 4, and 5, since those un-weighted points are clear and direct representations of points earned on each free-response question. But you are also welcome to weight each of these, per the formulas above, if youd prefer to view the required point totals as weighted.</p>
<p>Still no clarity on whether they used composite or raw or somehow both to calculate the AP score.</p>
<p>That is very strange that they would report raw scores that were not even weighted yet.</p>
<p>They said it was to give a clearer identifier of performance on the operational points of the test.</p>
<p>It doesn’t make it clearer though, since you could have a ton of people who received a 78 raw score but whose weighted composite scores were completely different. So the raw score doesn’t really mean anything unless they mean that the lowest weighted composite score needed couldn’t be reached with a raw score lower than 78. But that would mean that you could still get a 4 with a raw score of 78 if the weighting didn’t work out in your favor…weird.</p>
<p>The free response and MC were definitely both weighted 50% of the test, so it’s the same thing</p>
<p><a href=“Get the Most Out of AP – AP Students | College Board”>Get the Most Out of AP – AP Students | College Board;