If you've looked at your AP score report recently, you might have seen an AP Scholar Award above your scores. But what does this mean? If you didn't get one this year, how do you get one? What is an AP Scholar with Distinction? What is an AP Scholar Award with Honor? Are AP Scholar Awards worth anything, and are they good for college applications?
AP Scholar Awards are national awards that can be used as recognition for hard work and academic performance on college applications and resumes.
You can get an AP Scholar Award with high performance on your AP Tests throughout your high school career. These awards are given a week or two after AP scores release, and they are calculated using cumulative data instead of results from a single year's tests. Thus, you can work your way up to an AP Scholar Award gradually instead of taking too many AP tests at once.
To check if you have received these awards, go to your College Board account where you normally see your AP Scores. You may see AP Scholar Awards above the AP scores for a particular year. For example, here is an example of my AP Scholar Awards.
Courtesy of College Board
There are multiple AP Scholar levels, and each of these levels has different requirements. Anyone that meets those requirements can earn it, so there is no set number or percentage of students that will get one.
To start, we have the classic AP Scholar award. To earn this, you need to pass at least 3 AP tests with a score of 3 or higher.
Next, we have the AP Scholar with Honor award. To get this, you'll need to score a 3 or higher on 4 AP exams and have an overall AP score average of a 3.25 or greater.
Moving on, the AP Scholar with Distinction is basically the AP Scholar with Honor with stricter requirements. You will need to score at least a 3 on at least 5 AP exams and have an overall AP score average of at least 3.5.
Finally, we have the AP International Diploma. Only available for international students or those applying to international schools, this is perhaps the most complicated of the AP Scholar Awards to get. Similar to the IB Diploma, this award requires taking AP Exams from different subject areas. You will need 2 AP Language or Literature exams from different languages, 1 AP exam giving a wider view of the world, 1 STEM AP, and an additional AP test.
In a recent
Twitter reply, the head of the AP program, Trevor Packer, hinted that the AP Scholar awards would be removed. Since then, both State and National AP Scholar Awards have been discontinued, along with DoDEA and International AP Scholar. His justification? Taking too many AP classes places unnecessary burden on students.
Courtesy of Twitter
To understand why these awards were discontinued, let's take a look at their past requirements.
To get the State AP Scholar award, you had to pass the greatest number of AP exams and get the highest AP average in your state for your gender. This was one of the few awards that only a specific number of people could get, which made it very competitive.
The National AP Scholar award, in my opinion, was easier to get than the State AP Scholar award. Though it was still difficult and took a lot of hard work, there was no cap to the number of students that could earn it. To earn it, you needed an AP score average of at least 4 and at least 8 tests with scores of 4 or higher. There were also Canadian and Bermudan equivalents to these awards.
The DoDEA and International AP Scholars had almost the same requirements as State AP Scholar award. Both DoDEA and International awards were given to the male and female with the most passed AP Exams and the highest AP score average. However, the DoDEA Scholar was only for DoDEA students and the International Scholar only for non-US, non-Canada, and non-DoDEA students.
Basically, if you currently have one of the AP Scholar Awards that were discontinued, you will get to keep your current awards. However, if you are currently in the progress of getting one, you may be out of luck. So is this a good thing or not? In my opinion, I have mixed feelings about this.
On one hand, AP Scholar awards are a good incentive to do well on AP tests and also to encourage students to push themselves and taking more AP tests. On the other hand, there is an increased pressure to take too many AP tests, especially for National and State AP Scholars, with an increased atmosphere of needless competition. This competition is due to the fact that most students try to get these awards just for the sake of college applications and not because they want to learn the AP subject. Moreover, it seems that everyone wants to obtain these awards because other people that had them went to top schools, creating a sort of
imposter syndrome. Students think that they aren't doing enough, so they overwork themselves even more.
This pressure saturates the field of awards. Since more students are earning the AP awards, the awards themselves are gradually starting to mean less. Colleges and universities can only admit so many people, but more and more students are getting these awards every year to the point that schools don't see these awards as worth anything anymore. Admissions officers instead look at other factors, which means that all the hard work students have put in to earn AP Scholar awards mean less.
Even without AP Scholar awards, taking AP courses can still be really beneficial to college admissions, and doing well on exams can save you money in college. Hopefully, removing those awards will decrease competition in the AP space and reduce pressure on students.