Setuju dengan tulisan dibawah ini, bahwa IB tidak
menjamin keberhasilan di college.  Seperti pernah saya
singgung waktu gayung bersambut ke Dr. No, materi IB
adalah materi college.  Dua tahun terakhir dari high
school, terpaksa siswa harus berjuang mati-matian
menyelesaikan syllabus IB -- biasanya hanya sedikit
yang berhasil.  Selain ada soal ketidakadilan dengan
siswa lain yang tidak punya uang untuk masuk sekolah
yang meyelenggarakan IB, program ini ada bahayanya.

Pertama, setelah energi habis (burnt out) ada siswa
yang loyo setelah di college -- contohnya banyak.
Kedua, setelah mengenal calculus dan advanced physics
dan advanced chemistry, si student meremehkan materi
freshman yang mathematics-nya mulai lagi dengan
algebra.  Akibat sikap meremehkan ini bisa fatal,
tanpa disadari.

Salam,
RM

---------------------------------  
 
washingtonpost.com 

Advanced Courses in High School May Not Mean Success
at College 
Report Urges Students to Take Exams After Honors
Programs 

By Jay Mathews
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, December 23, 2004; Page A07 


College-level courses offered in high school, such as
Advanced Placement (AP) or International Baccalaureate
(IB), do not appear to improve academic performance in
college, unless students take the tests at the end of
each course, according to a major study by researchers
at the University of California at Berkeley.

But, the report emphasized, performing well on the
difficult exams is a better predictor of success in
college than nearly anything else in a student's high
school record.

The report is expected to create controversy among
college recruiters, high school educators and students
preparing for college, because the most selective
colleges virtually require that students take AP or
IB. Many school districts, including several in the
Washington area, give extra grade points for taking
college-level courses, a practice the Berkeley
researchers say may have gone too far.

The AP program, run by the New York-based College
Board, is one of the fastest-growing in the country.
The number of students taking AP exams rose from
133,702 in 1981 to 1,017,396 in 2004. The IB program,
although much smaller, also grew rapidly.

The Berkeley study, based on a sample of 81,445
students at eight University of California campuses,
contradicts in some ways a 1999 U.S. Education
Department report, based on a sample of about 8,700
students, that said the more intense academic
experience provided by honors or college-level courses
in high school made it more likely that those
students, particularly minorities, would graduate from
college.

The Berkeley report, obtained yesterday by The
Washington Post, is also at odds with recent research
by the National Center for Educational Accountability,
based on 78,079 Texas college students, that suggested
even doing poorly on a college-level test in high
school was more likely to improve chances of college
graduation than not taking the course and test at all.

The 29-page report by Saul Geiser and Veronica
Santelices did, however, endorse the view among high
school educators, particularly in the Washington area,
that taking AP and IB courses and tests is important
preparation for college. The scores on the difficult
AP tests "have a greater predictive weight [on future
college academic performance] than any other factor
except high school grades," the report said.

The Berkeley study, which has not yet been
peer-reviewed, was inspired by the University of
California admissions policy of giving a full extra
grade point -- making each A worth five points rather
than four -- for any grade in any AP, IB or honors
course, even if the student did not take the
three-hour AP or five-hour IB exams.

The report notes that more than 40 percent of AP
students in California may be getting that credit
without taking the exams and not being any more
prepared for college than students who did not take AP
courses and did not get the extra grade point. This is
particularly unfair to low-income and minority
students who "typically have less access to AP courses
than those from schools with higher college-going
rates," the report said.

"Admissions officers need to reconsider the manner in
which AP and honors courses are treated in 'high
stakes' admissions," the report said. "Such
reconsideration assumes special importance in light of
the disparity in AP honors participation among groups
that have been historically underrepresented in higher
education."

Washington area AP and IB administrators said the
report buttressed their own view that the
college-level courses risk being diluted by weak or
uncertain teachers unless all students in them are
required to take the May exams, which are written and
scored by outside experts.

Bernadette Glaze, specialist for advanced academic
programs in the Fairfax County schools, said that her
system began to require that all AP and IB students
take the final examinations in 1998. Schools delete
the bonus half-point from the grade of any student who
does not take the test. The grades on AP and IB exams
are not received until midsummer and do not affect
report card grades.

Erin McVadon Albright, the IB coordinator at Annandale
High School in Fairfax County, said the report
confirmed the importance of good teaching and giving
the exams.

William Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions at Harvard
University, said his school looks at actual AP and IB
test scores, and he believes the bonus points given by
many schools are not of much use.

Geiser said in an interview that there are major
problems with requiring AP or IB tests for college
admissions, such as putting minorities at a
disadvantage, adding to students' test burdens, and
creating confusion about honors courses other than AP
and IB. 





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