Schools

Parkway School District Receives Prestigious AP Honor

Hundreds of school districts were recognized for increasing access to Advanced Placement programs for "underrepresented students."

CHESTERFIELD, MO — Hundreds of school districts, including the Parkway School district and five others in Missouri, have been named to the annual AP District Honor Roll, which recognizes schools that increase access and performance related to Advanced Placement programs. More than 370 school districts across the country and in Canada were recognized on the 9th annual list.

To qualify, large school districts had to show there was at least 4 percent more participation and access to Advanced Placement programs. Medium districts had to see at least a 6 percent increase and small districts had to see at least 11 percent.

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These schools increased access to Advanced Placement courses for minority students while also improving or maintaining the rate at which participating students scored a 3 or higher on an AP Exam.

Here are the school districts that made the grade in Missouri:

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  • Jefferson City, Diocese of Jefferson City Education Office
  • St. Charles, Francis Howell School District
  • Kearney, Kearney School District
  • Nixa, Nixa School District R2
  • Chesterfield, Parkway School District
  • Lake Ozark, School of The Osage District

The organization noted the districts that saw at least 30 percent enrollment of American Indian, African-American and Hispanic/Latino students with an asterisk. Those where at least 30 percent of participants qualified for free or reduced lunch were noted with a dagger symbol. Districts that received a star achieved the honor over multiple years.

National data from this year showed that about half of underrepresented students with a “high degree of readiness for AP” participated in the program, the organization wrote on its website.

College Board sponsors the Advanced Placement program and the popular SAT test, which attempts to assess a students’ college-readiness. The Honor Roll recognition is based on three years of data from 2016 to 2018.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

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