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AP Latin

Advanced Placement (AP) Latin, formerly Advanced Placement (AP) Latin: Vergil, is an examination in Latin literature offered to American high school students by the College Board's Advanced Placement Program. Prior to the 2012–2013 academic year, the course focused on poetry selections from the Aeneid, written by Augustan author Publius Vergilius Maro, also known as Vergil or Virgil. However, in the 2012–2013 year, the College Board changed the content of the course to include not only poetry, but also prose. The modified course consists of both selections from Vergil and selections from Commentaries on the Gallic War, written by prose author Gaius Julius Caesar. Also included in the new curriculum is an increased focus on sight reading. The student taking the exam will not necessarily have been exposed to the specific reading passage that appears on this portion of the exam. The College Board suggests that a curriculum include practice with sight reading. The exam is administered in May and is three hours long, consisting of a one-hour multiple-choice section and a two-hour free-response section.

Material previously tested (before 2012) edit

Students were expected to be familiar with these following lines of the Aeneid:[1]

  • Book 1: Lines 1–519
  • Book 2: Lines 1–56, 199–297, 469–566, 735-804
  • Book 4: Lines 1–449, 642–705
  • Book 6: Lines 1–211, 450–476, 847–901
  • Book 10: Lines 420-509
  • Book 12: Lines 791–842, 887-952

Students were also expected to be familiar with the total content of Books 1 through 12.

Abilities tested edit

The exam tests students' abilities to:[1]

  • Translate a Latin passage from the syllabus into English literally
  • Explicate specific words and phrases in context
  • Identify the context and significance of short excerpts from the works specified in the syllabus
  • Identify and analyze characteristic or noteworthy features of the authors' modes of expression, including their use of imagery, figures of speech, sound effects, and metrical effects (in poetry only), as seen in specific passages
  • Discuss particular motifs or general themes not only suggested by passages but also relevant to other selections
  • Analyze and discuss structure and to demonstrate an awareness of the features used in the construction of a poem, thesis, or an argument
  • Scan the meters specified in the syllabus

Reading and translation edit

Critical appreciation of the Aeneid as poetry implies the ability to translate literally, to analyze, to interpret, to read aloud with attention to pauses and phrasing, and to scan the dactylic hexameter verse. Students should be given extensive practice in reading at sight and in translating literally so that their translations not only are accurate and precise, but also make sense in English.

The instructions for the translation questions, "translate as literally as possible," call for a translation that is accurate and precise. In some cases an idiom may be translated in a way that makes sense in English but is rather loose compared to the Latin. In general, however, students are reminded that:[1]

Exam edit

The three-hour exam consists of a one-hour multiple-choice section and a two-hour free-response section that includes fifteen minutes of reading time and one hour forty-five minutes of writing time.[2] The multiple choice section includes approximately fifty questions that relate to four passages: three read at sight and one from the syllabus. The multiple choice questions test the many skills learned and practiced throughout the year, including:[2]

  • 20–30% grammar and lexical questions (10–15 questions)
  • 35–45% translation or interpretation of a phrase or sentence (17–23 questions)
  • 2–5% metrics: that is, scansion of the dactylic hexameter line (1–3 questions)
  • 2–5% figures of speech (1–3 questions)
  • 20–30% identification of allusions or references, recognition of words understood but unexpressed, explication of inferences to be drawn (10–15 questions)
  • 2–5% background questions on the Aeneid passage only (1–3 questions)

The free-response section includes translation, analysis, and interpretation of the Latin text from the syllabus. The format is as follows:[2]

  • Question 1: a 10-minute translation
  • Question 2: a 10-minute translation
  • Question 3: a 45-minute long essay
  • Question 4: a 20-minute short essay
  • Question 5: a 20-minute short essay based on the entire Aeneid (Latin selections and parts read in English)

Current AP Latin curriculum (2012-present) edit

For the 2012–2013 academic year, the College Board announced that it had made revisions to its AP Latin curriculum. In general, the College Board announced new goals in the curriculum. These include:[3]

  • Required readings in both prose and poetry
  • Development of student capacity to read Latin at sight
  • Greater focus on grammatical, syntactical, and literary terminology

Instead of solely focusing on Vergil's Aeneid, the curriculum will now include both prose and poetry, including selections from Julius Caesar's Commentaries on the Gallic War.[3] The new required reading list, including revisions to the number of lines required from the Aeneid, is:[4]

Vergil's Aeneid

  • Book 1: Lines 1–209, 418–440, 494–578
  • Book 2: Lines 40–56, 201–249, 268–297, 559–620
  • Book 4: Lines 160–218, 259–361, 659–705
  • Book 6: Lines 295–332, 384–425, 450–476, 847–899

Caesar's Gallic War

  • Book 1: Chapters 1–7
  • Book 4: Chapters 24–35 and the first sentence of Chapter 36 (Eodem die legati [. . . ] venerunt.)
  • Book 5: Chapters 24–48
  • Book 6: Chapters 13–20

Also, there is a change to the required readings in English. The new list from the Aeneid is books 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12, instead of all twelve books, as was previously required.[1] The new required reading list in English from the Gallic War is books 1, 6, and 7. Also in the revised curriculum there is also a newly placed emphasis on sight reading. The College Board announced that the exam will include Latin passages not on the required readings lists in an effort to enhance students' ability to read at sight. Recommended authors for prose include (inexhaustibly): Nepos, Cicero (though not his letters), Livy, Pliny the Younger, and Seneca the Younger, rather than authors such as Tacitus or Sallust. For poetry, recommended authors (inexhaustibly) include: Ovid, Martial, Tibullus, and Catullus, rather than poets such as Horace, Juvenal, or Lucan.[5] For practice with sight reading in both poetry and prose, the College Board recommends additional Latin passages in the Aeneid and Gallic War that are not included in the required reading list.

The free-response section includes translation, analysis, and interpretation of the Latin text from the syllabus. The format is as follows:

  • Question 1: 15-minute translation: Vergil
  • Question 2: 15-minute translation: Caesar
  • Question 3: 45-minute analytical essay
  • Question 4: 15-minute short answers: Vergil
  • Question 5: 15-minute short answers: Caesar

Grade distribution edit

In the 2010 administration, 6,523 students took the exam, and 4,114 passed (3 or higher), or about 63.1%.[6] In the 2011 administration, 6,044 students took the exam, and 3,861 passed (3 or higher), or about 63.9%.[7] In the 2012 administration, 18,161 students took the exam, and 11,244 passed (3 or higher), or about 61.9%.[8]

In the 2013 administration of the redesigned exam, 6,667 students took the exam, and 4,442 passed (3 or higher), or about 66.6%.[9] In the 2014 administration of the exam, 6,542 students took the exam, a slight decrease from last year, and 4,307 passed (3 or higher), or about 65.8%, a slight decrease from last year's pass rate.[10]

The grade distributions were:

Score percentages
Year 5 4 3 2 1 % of scores 3 or higher Mean Standard deviation Number of students
2010 21.4% 17.6% 24.1% 17.8% 19.1% 63.1% 3.04 1.40 6,523
2011 20.2% 18.1% 25.6% 18.3% 17.9% 63.9% 3.05 1.37 6,044
2012 18.9% 18.2% 24.8% 23.9% 14.2% 61.9% 3.04 1.32 6,424
2013 14.1% 20.9% 31.6% 22.9% 10.5% 66.6% 3.05 1.19 6,667
2014 13.2% 22.4% 30.2% 24.0% 10.1% 65.8% 3.05 1.18 6,542
2015 12.7% 21.5% 29.5% 24.3% 12% 63.7% 2.98 1.20 6,571
2016[11] 12.8% 20.7% 32.2% 23.1% 11.2% 65.7% 3.00 1.19 6,584
2017[12] 12.9% 19.5% 31.2% 22.7% 13.7% 63.6% 2.94 1.21 6,647
2018[13] 14.4% 20.1% 31.9% 22.8% 10.7% 66.4% 3.05 1.20 6,409
2019[14] 13.1% 19.3% 30.7% 24.1% 12.8% 63.1% 2.96 1.21 6,112
2020 (online)[15] 16.5% 20.4% 32.3% 17.9% 12.9% 69.2% 3.10 1.25 5,850
2021[16] 10.0% 16.9% 29.9% 25.3% 17.9% 56.8% 2.76 1.22 4,899
2022[17] 11.2% 16.1% 29.8% 24.8% 18.2% 57.0% 2.77 1.24 4,832
2023[18] 12.3% 16.5% 28.0% 24.9% 18.4% 56.7% 2.80 1.27 4,533
 
There is a notable change in the pattern of scorings from 2012 to 2013.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Course and Exam Description - Fall 2012" (PDF). College Board. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c College Board AP Latin: Vergil Course Description
  3. ^ a b "About AP – AP Central | College Board". Apcentral.collegeboard.org. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  4. ^ "AP Latin: Course and Exam Description" (PDF). College Board. Fall 2012. p. 26. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  5. ^ "AP Latin: Course and Exam Description" (PDF). College Board. Fall 2012. p. 27. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  6. ^ "College Board AP Latin: Vergil 2010 Score Distribution" (PDF). Apcentral.collegeboard.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  7. ^ "College Board AP Latin: Vergil 2011 Score Distribution" (PDF). Apcentral.collegeboard.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  8. ^ College Board AP Latin: Vergil 2012 Score Distribution
  9. ^ "College Board AP Latin Student Score Distributions - Global Distributions - May 2013" (PDF). Media.collegeboard.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  10. ^ "College Board AP Latin Student Score Distributions - Global Distributions - May 2014" (PDF). Media.collegeboard.com. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  11. ^ Total Registration. "2016 AP Exam Score Distributions". www.totalregistration.net. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  12. ^ "2017 AP Exam Score Distributions". Apscore.collegeboard.com.
  13. ^ "2018 AP Exam Score Distributions". Apscore.collegeboard.com.
  14. ^ Total Registration (June 19, 2019). "2019 AP Exam Score Distributions". Totalregistration.net. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
  15. ^ "STUDENT SCORE DISTRIBUTIONS" (PDF). Secure-media.collegeboard.org. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  16. ^ "STUDENT SCORE DISTRIBUTIONS : AP Exams - May 2021" (PDF). Secure-media.collegevboard.org. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  17. ^ "The 2022 AP Latin Exam scores". Twitter.com. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  18. ^ Total Registration (2023-06-23). "2023 AP Exam Score Distributions". www.totalregistration.net. Retrieved 2023-06-23.

External links edit

  • AP Latin: Course Revisions for the 2012-2013 Year
  • Commentary on selections from the Latin text of the Aeneid at Dickinson College Commentaries (including the AP selections)

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This article is about the course and exam focusing on Vergil For the general purpose literature course and exam see AP Latin Literature Advanced Placement AP Latin formerly Advanced Placement AP Latin Vergil is an examination in Latin literature offered to American high school students by the College Board s Advanced Placement Program Prior to the 2012 2013 academic year the course focused on poetry selections from the Aeneid written by Augustan author Publius Vergilius Maro also known as Vergil or Virgil However in the 2012 2013 year the College Board changed the content of the course to include not only poetry but also prose The modified course consists of both selections from Vergil and selections from Commentaries on the Gallic War written by prose author Gaius Julius Caesar Also included in the new curriculum is an increased focus on sight reading The student taking the exam will not necessarily have been exposed to the specific reading passage that appears on this portion of the exam The College Board suggests that a curriculum include practice with sight reading The exam is administered in May and is three hours long consisting of a one hour multiple choice section and a two hour free response section Contents 1 Material previously tested before 2012 2 Abilities tested 3 Reading and translation 4 Exam 5 Current AP Latin curriculum 2012 present 6 Grade distribution 7 References 8 External linksMaterial previously tested before 2012 editStudents were expected to be familiar with these following lines of the Aeneid 1 Book 1 Lines 1 519 Book 2 Lines 1 56 199 297 469 566 735 804 Book 4 Lines 1 449 642 705 Book 6 Lines 1 211 450 476 847 901 Book 10 Lines 420 509 Book 12 Lines 791 842 887 952Students were also expected to be familiar with the total content of Books 1 through 12 Abilities tested editThe exam tests students abilities to 1 Translate a Latin passage from the syllabus into English literally Explicate specific words and phrases in context Identify the context and significance of short excerpts from the works specified in the syllabus Identify and analyze characteristic or noteworthy features of the authors modes of expression including their use of imagery figures of speech sound effects and metrical effects in poetry only as seen in specific passages Discuss particular motifs or general themes not only suggested by passages but also relevant to other selections Analyze and discuss structure and to demonstrate an awareness of the features used in the construction of a poem thesis or an argument Scan the meters specified in the syllabusReading and translation editCritical appreciation of the Aeneid as poetry implies the ability to translate literally to analyze to interpret to read aloud with attention to pauses and phrasing and to scan the dactylic hexameter verse Students should be given extensive practice in reading at sight and in translating literally so that their translations not only are accurate and precise but also make sense in English The instructions for the translation questions translate as literally as possible call for a translation that is accurate and precise In some cases an idiom may be translated in a way that makes sense in English but is rather loose compared to the Latin In general however students are reminded that 1 The tense voice number and mood of verbs need to be translated literally Subject verb agreement must be correct Participles should be rendered precisely with regard to tense and voice Ablative absolutes may be rendered literally or as subordinate clauses however the tense and number of the participle must be rendered accurately Historical present is acceptable as long as it is used consistently throughout the passage Exam editThe three hour exam consists of a one hour multiple choice section and a two hour free response section that includes fifteen minutes of reading time and one hour forty five minutes of writing time 2 The multiple choice section includes approximately fifty questions that relate to four passages three read at sight and one from the syllabus The multiple choice questions test the many skills learned and practiced throughout the year including 2 20 30 grammar and lexical questions 10 15 questions 35 45 translation or interpretation of a phrase or sentence 17 23 questions 2 5 metrics that is scansion of the dactylic hexameter line 1 3 questions 2 5 figures of speech 1 3 questions 20 30 identification of allusions or references recognition of words understood but unexpressed explication of inferences to be drawn 10 15 questions 2 5 background questions on the Aeneid passage only 1 3 questions The free response section includes translation analysis and interpretation of the Latin text from the syllabus The format is as follows 2 Question 1 a 10 minute translation Question 2 a 10 minute translation Question 3 a 45 minute long essay Question 4 a 20 minute short essay Question 5 a 20 minute short essay based on the entire Aeneid Latin selections and parts read in English Current AP Latin curriculum 2012 present editFor the 2012 2013 academic year the College Board announced that it had made revisions to its AP Latin curriculum In general the College Board announced new goals in the curriculum These include 3 Required readings in both prose and poetry Development of student capacity to read Latin at sight Greater focus on grammatical syntactical and literary terminologyInstead of solely focusing on Vergil s Aeneid the curriculum will now include both prose and poetry including selections from Julius Caesar s Commentaries on the Gallic War 3 The new required reading list including revisions to the number of lines required from the Aeneid is 4 Vergil s Aeneid Book 1 Lines 1 209 418 440 494 578 Book 2 Lines 40 56 201 249 268 297 559 620 Book 4 Lines 160 218 259 361 659 705 Book 6 Lines 295 332 384 425 450 476 847 899Caesar s Gallic War Book 1 Chapters 1 7 Book 4 Chapters 24 35 and the first sentence of Chapter 36 Eodem die legati venerunt Book 5 Chapters 24 48 Book 6 Chapters 13 20Also there is a change to the required readings in English The new list from the Aeneid is books 1 2 4 6 8 and 12 instead of all twelve books as was previously required 1 The new required reading list in English from the Gallic War is books 1 6 and 7 Also in the revised curriculum there is also a newly placed emphasis on sight reading The College Board announced that the exam will include Latin passages not on the required readings lists in an effort to enhance students ability to read at sight Recommended authors for prose include inexhaustibly Nepos Cicero though not his letters Livy Pliny the Younger and Seneca the Younger rather than authors such as Tacitus or Sallust For poetry recommended authors inexhaustibly include Ovid Martial Tibullus and Catullus rather than poets such as Horace Juvenal or Lucan 5 For practice with sight reading in both poetry and prose the College Board recommends additional Latin passages in the Aeneid and Gallic War that are not included in the required reading list The free response section includes translation analysis and interpretation of the Latin text from the syllabus The format is as follows Question 1 15 minute translation Vergil Question 2 15 minute translation Caesar Question 3 45 minute analytical essay Question 4 15 minute short answers Vergil Question 5 15 minute short answers CaesarGrade distribution editIn the 2010 administration 6 523 students took the exam and 4 114 passed 3 or higher or about 63 1 6 In the 2011 administration 6 044 students took the exam and 3 861 passed 3 or higher or about 63 9 7 In the 2012 administration 18 161 students took the exam and 11 244 passed 3 or higher or about 61 9 8 In the 2013 administration of the redesigned exam 6 667 students took the exam and 4 442 passed 3 or higher or about 66 6 9 In the 2014 administration of the exam 6 542 students took the exam a slight decrease from last year and 4 307 passed 3 or higher or about 65 8 a slight decrease from last year s pass rate 10 The grade distributions were Score percentagesYear 5 4 3 2 1 of scores 3 or higher Mean Standard deviation Number of students2010 21 4 17 6 24 1 17 8 19 1 63 1 3 04 1 40 6 5232011 20 2 18 1 25 6 18 3 17 9 63 9 3 05 1 37 6 0442012 18 9 18 2 24 8 23 9 14 2 61 9 3 04 1 32 6 4242013 14 1 20 9 31 6 22 9 10 5 66 6 3 05 1 19 6 6672014 13 2 22 4 30 2 24 0 10 1 65 8 3 05 1 18 6 5422015 12 7 21 5 29 5 24 3 12 63 7 2 98 1 20 6 5712016 11 12 8 20 7 32 2 23 1 11 2 65 7 3 00 1 19 6 5842017 12 12 9 19 5 31 2 22 7 13 7 63 6 2 94 1 21 6 6472018 13 14 4 20 1 31 9 22 8 10 7 66 4 3 05 1 20 6 4092019 14 13 1 19 3 30 7 24 1 12 8 63 1 2 96 1 21 6 1122020 online 15 16 5 20 4 32 3 17 9 12 9 69 2 3 10 1 25 5 8502021 16 10 0 16 9 29 9 25 3 17 9 56 8 2 76 1 22 4 8992022 17 11 2 16 1 29 8 24 8 18 2 57 0 2 77 1 24 4 8322023 18 12 3 16 5 28 0 24 9 18 4 56 7 2 80 1 27 4 533 nbsp There is a notable change in the pattern of scorings from 2012 to 2013 References edit a b c d Course and Exam Description Fall 2012 PDF College Board Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c College Board AP Latin Vergil Course Description a b About AP AP Central College Board Apcentral collegeboard org Retrieved 23 July 2022 AP Latin Course and Exam Description PDF College Board Fall 2012 p 26 Retrieved 21 April 2013 AP Latin Course and Exam Description PDF College Board Fall 2012 p 27 Retrieved 21 April 2013 College Board AP Latin Vergil 2010 Score Distribution PDF Apcentral collegeboard com Retrieved 23 July 2022 College Board AP Latin Vergil 2011 Score Distribution PDF Apcentral collegeboard com Retrieved 23 July 2022 College Board AP Latin Vergil 2012 Score Distribution College Board AP Latin Student Score Distributions Global Distributions May 2013 PDF Media collegeboard com Retrieved 23 July 2022 College Board AP Latin Student Score Distributions Global Distributions May 2014 PDF Media collegeboard com Retrieved 23 July 2022 Total Registration 2016 AP Exam Score Distributions www totalregistration net Retrieved 2016 07 01 2017 AP Exam Score Distributions Apscore collegeboard com 2018 AP Exam Score Distributions Apscore collegeboard com Total Registration June 19 2019 2019 AP Exam Score Distributions Totalregistration net Retrieved 2019 06 19 STUDENT SCORE DISTRIBUTIONS PDF Secure media collegeboard org Retrieved June 9 2021 STUDENT SCORE DISTRIBUTIONS AP Exams May 2021 PDF Secure media collegevboard org Retrieved July 23 2022 The 2022 AP Latin Exam scores Twitter com Retrieved July 23 2022 Total Registration 2023 06 23 2023 AP Exam Score Distributions www totalregistration net Retrieved 2023 06 23 External links editAP Latin Vergil at CollegeBoard com AP Latin Course Revisions for the 2012 2013 Year Commentary on selections from the Latin text of the Aeneid at Dickinson College Commentaries including the AP selections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title AP Latin amp oldid 1183744982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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