TIMSS AP
students AP students didn't do much better than international average on
TIMSS Calculus Date sent: Tue, 17 Mar 1998 08:56:17 EST Send reply to:
core-net@TUCC6.TUCC.Trinity.Edu From: Dave TNCLE To: Multiple
recipients of list Subject: TIMSS & "AP"
Students Originally to: core-net@TUCC6.TUCC.Trinity.Edu,
CESNEWS@BROWNVM.BROWN.EDU I thought some of you might be interested in the
response I received from the College Board to a question about the performance
of AP students on the recent TIMSS tests. First my question, then the response.
Dave Shearon Nashville, TN > ---------- > From: Dave
TNCLE[SMTP:DaveTNCLE@aol.com] > Sent: Monday, March 16, 1998 2:42 PM > To:
wcurry@collegeboard.org; parbolino@collegeboard.org; >
cgill@collegeboard.org; fwright@collegeboard.org > Cc: ap-agent1@ets.org >
Subject: TIMSS Results & AP Students > > Bill O'Neal with ETS
suggested I contact you with my question: > > Does the College Board have
any comment or analysis yet about the > recently > announced high school
results from the Third International Math & > Science > Study? As you
probably know, that study showed American students > trailing > foreign
counterparts in math and science and, worse, even our advanced > students not
matching up to their counterparts. > Subj: RE: TIMSS Results & AP
Students Date: 98-03-16 17:35:29 EST From: WCurry@collegeboard.org (Curry, Wade)
To: WCurry@collegeboard.org (Curry, Wade), PArbolino@collegeboard.org (Arbolino,
Philip), CGill@collegeboard.org (Gill, Charlotte), FWright@collegeboard.org
(Wright, Frederick), DaveTNCLE@aol.com ('Dave TNCLE') CC: ap-agent1@ets.org
Hello, Mr. Shearon, Since the calculus questions, according to Chan Jones who
trained the TIMSS scorers, were much easier than the average questions on the
Calculus AB exams, it was surprising that the AP Calculus students performed
only a little better than the international mean. It was shocking that AP
Physics students did not do better than the mean. Since the study did not
attempt to get a random sample of AP students, perhaps that is the problem. We
have thus far been unable to obtain further information about the size or nature
of the sample. A recent study at 20 selective US universities (14 state
universities, Yale, Duke, Stanford, Carnegie Mellon, Tulane, and Boston College)
indicates that students exempted from a course on the basis of an AP grade in
Physics or Calculus outperform in the next higher level course those students
who take the course equivalent to AP at the university. About 75% of those
receiving AP 5s and 4s earn As or Bs in the next course. Those in Physics C and
Calculus BC are extraordinary students; 93% are in the top fifth of their class,
and the mean SAT Quantitative score is 715. Arthur, Those are levels of AP
courses. Don't know about Physics C, but I understand Calculus BC is the
equivalent of a full two-semester college calculus course. Date sent: Thu, 19
Mar 1998 16:34:08 EST Send reply to: core-net@TUCC6.TUCC.Trinity.Edu From: Dave
TNCLE To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: TIMSS & AP Students Originally to:
CESNEWS@BROWNVM.BROWN.EDU, core-net@TUCC6.TUCC.Trinity.Edu For those of you who
may have been following this exchange: Subj: TIMSS Results Date: 98-03-18
17:18:06 EST From: clwright@ets.org (craig wright) Reply-to: clwright@ets.org
To: DaveTNCLE@aol.com Dave: Your message regarding TIMSS results was forwarded
to me. I have not seen anything in the TIMSS results that isolates students in
AP Calculus or AP Physics. My understanding is that "advanced mathematics"
students for TIMSS were those taking AP Calculus, calculus, or precalculus.
Similarly, for physics, "advanced science" students were those taking AP Physics
or physics. In mathematics there is a big difference between students in
precalculus and students in an AP Calculus course; it is important to note that
some questions on TIMSS were calculus questions. I would be very interested in
any information that you have seen that identifies AP students as a separate
group in the TIMSS results. Craig L. Wright Associate Examiner in Mathematics
Assessment Division Educational Testing Service Princeton, NJ 08541 (609)
683-2642 clwright@ets.org