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Valley Schools Dominate AP Test Taking

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TIMES EDUCATION WRITER

Los Angeles school officials announced Thursday that the number of students taking advanced placement exams rose 11.6% this year, continuing a decade-long trend, while scores increased slightly.

The results gave school officials a welcomed chance to boast, coming days after the release of disappointing scores on the Stanford Nine standardized test. The district ranked in the bottom third nationally on that examination.

For the record:

12:00 a.m. Oct. 11, 1997 For the Record
Los Angeles Times Saturday October 11, 1997 Valley Edition Metro Part B Page 3 Zones Desk 1 inches; 34 words Type of Material: Correction
Scores: The fourth column in a chart that accompanied a story on the Advanced Placement test was mislabeled in Friday’s Times. It should have read, “Percentage of scores of 3 or better, the grade which qualifies the student for college credit.”

“I am very delighted to see these test scores,” said school board President Julie Korenstein at a news conference to release the advanced placement results.

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San Fernando Valley high schools dominated the district’s best in both the number of examinations taken and the diversity of subjects tested.

Seven Valley schools were among the top 10 in the number of exams given. Among those, North Hollywood, Van Nuys and El Camino Real also placed in the top 100 across the nation.

Perennial AP leader North Hollywood was the district’s top school both in the number of exams taken, 1,244, and subject areas, 25, while maintaining a score of 3-out-of-5 or better on 69.1% of the exams.

Higher scores were registered at El Camino Real, 78.7% 3 or better, and Van Nuys, 75.6%.

Last year, North Hollywood produced the second- and third-highest scoring scholars in the country and 19 of its students scored at least a 4 on eight or more exams, accounting for 2% of those earning the distinction of National AP Scholar.

North Hollywood and Harvard-Westlake High School, an exclusive private campus in Studio City, ranked among the nation’s top 50 in the number of students who took advanced placement exams.

“We have a disproportionate number of smart kids at our school,” Harvard-Westlake Headmaster Thomas C. Hudnut said Thursday. “We know that students do best who stretch themselves . . . we try to provide a curriculum to make that possible.”

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Two years ago the school administered the fourth-highest number of advanced placement tests in the nation, he said.

In the public school system, meanwhile, in addition to the increase in students taking the exams, the number of tests taken rose at the same rate. The tests are offered in a variety of subjects and a score of 3 or better out of a possible 5 can be used to gain college credit.

The increases indicate that more students are tackling tougher course work, said Janice Gams, spokeswoman for the College Board, the nonprofit organization that administers the tests.

Expansion of advanced placement courses, college preparatory classes that prepare students for the exams, was one of the 21 goals in the contract of Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Ruben Zacarias.

Although the exams, whose results were announced Thursday, were taken before he assumed the district’s top job in July, Zacarias said he was excited by the outcome.

Bob Collins, director of instruction for the district’s high schools, called the 16,506 exams taken this year “remarkable for an urban school district.”

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“We are expanding this AP program at a rate that is explosive,” he said.

More students have taken the exams in the Los Angeles district each year since 1986. Scores, however, dived two years ago from a mean of 2.94 to 2.8.

The district’s mean score of 2.85 this year represented the second-consecutive increase. Districtwide, 16.9% of students scored 5, which signifies that they are “extremely well-qualified” in college-level work, and 16.4% scored 4, making them “well qualified.” Both groups were up slightly from the 16% scoring at each of those levels last year.

Still, the district’s scores were below the statewide and national means, both slightly above 3.

However, Gams said the fact that more students took the tests without lowering the mean score is a sign that the college preparation work is being mastered.

Statewide, 15 high schools were among the top 50 nationally that administered the most advanced placement exams--700 or more. All but two of the 15 were public campuses, and all had above-average pass rates on the rigorous tests, according to Wade Curry, who directs the advanced placement program for the New York-based College Board.

In Los Angeles County, in addition to North Hollywood and Harvard-Westlake, the schools whose students took the most advanced placement tests overall were Arcadia High, Beverly Hills High, Whitney High in Cerritos, Long Beach Polytechnic High and Palos Verdes Peninsula High.

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In Orange County, the honors list includes University High in Irvine, Sunny Hills High in Fullerton and Fountain Valley High.

Clovis West High School in the Fresno area, La Jolla High and Torrey Pines High in San Diego County, and Lowell High and St. Ignatius College Prep in San Francisco round out the list.

Much more dramatic increases occurred at several schools with historically low levels of participation. Dorsey High in the Crenshaw district increased from 42 exams taken to 82 and Eagle Rock High from 111 to 204.

Times staff writer Hector Tobar and education writer Elaine Woo contributed to this story.

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Top Performers

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School 1996 1997 Percentage of Increase North Hollywood 1,077 1,244 69.1 Van Nuys 802 895 75.6 El Camino 543 614 78.7 Taft 673 599 67.3 Granada Hills 475 555 56.8 Cleveland 472 492 50.0 Chatsworth 432 416 56.8

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