Hillsborough school reflects rise in Advanced Placement classes, good and bad
By Ron Matus, Times Staff Writer
In Print: Sunday, May 3, 2009
East Bay High sophomore Rachael Jeter and about 300 other students take a practice Advanced Placement test Friday. There has been a big increase in participation in AP courses in Florida.
GIBSONTON — Last fall, Cydni Thomas, a red-haired 10th-grader who raises blue-ribbon chickens, hunkered down for the hardest class she ever had.
Cydni (pronounced "Sydney") had never heard of Advanced Placement World History. But one of her teachers at East Bay High School told her she could handle it. And if it could help make her a Florida Gator, well then, the 16-year-old figured she would give it a shot.
But the reading load crushed her. Ancient civilizations made her head spin. Her first report card showed an F. A few months in, Cydni wanted out.
But her teacher, a blunt-talking retired Army officer named Dale Hueber, had other ideas. He showed Cydni what a top student's work looked like. He told her how to catch up and where to get extra help. He said she shouldn't be afraid to speak up in class. Then he gave her something even more valuable:
He said, You can do this.
• • •
For decades, AP classes — college-caliber courses in everything from English to biology to statistics — were reserved for an exclusive club. And its members tended to be white, suburban and confidently college bound.
But no more. Increasingly, AP classes are filling up with students who are "average" and low income, black and Hispanic.
From 2004 to 2008, the number of students across the country participating in AP rose from 1.1 million to 1.6 million. In Florida, the numbers jumped from 68,000 to 118,000, making it a national leader.
At Cydni's school, AP is the new normal.
East Bay High does not conjure images of calculus parties. It's down the street from the billowing stacks of TECO Energy's Big Bend power plant, and smack dab in a patch of Florida best known for retired circus performers. The state says it's a C school.
And yet, its AP rates are soaring. Five years ago, 58 East Bay students took the standardized exams that accompany AP courses, fewer than any school in Hillsborough. But last year, 297 did. And for this year's testing season, which begins Monday, 453 will.
"I always said my top kids could compete with the top kids in the district," said East Bay principal Sharon Morris.
The line from AP supporters goes like this: Raise expectations. Offer more support. And watch as supposedly middle-of-the-road students conquer AP, go to college and do better once they get there.
The arguments are compelling. But the proof isn't in yet.
Many AP newbies in Florida are not passing AP tests, which would be a good predictor of success in college. East Bay students took 206 more AP tests last year, but only 37 more tests had passing scores. In Florida, the percentage of passed tests has fallen from 55.6 percent in 2000 to 42 percent last year.
The state wants that to change. Beginning this fall, the state's grading formula for high schools will rely less on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test and more on other factors, including AP scores.
The cranked-up accountability ensures that the tough questions that now quietly surround AP will be amplified.
Should so many kids take AP classes, even if they're not headed for college? Can pushing kids so far, so fast demoralize those who fall short? Are the new AP kids prepared enough?
Are teachers being trained enough to help them? Will AP classes be watered down so the new kids can keep pace?
Will the brightest kids lose out?
In a report that drew national attention last week, the Fordham Institute surveyed 1,000 AP teachers. Most said they're holding down the fort on AP quality. But more than half also said too many AP kids are "in over their heads."
Supporters say students benefit, even if they don't pass the tests. They learn what a college-level course is like. They find out how much sweat it takes to succeed in one. And they're more likely to try another AP course and work harder the next time. Those students, they say, become more college focused and more college ready.
In truth, the research findings into those claims are mixed and minimal. But fair-minded observers wouldn't expect scores to rise overnight.
Hillsborough is pushing AP more than any other district in Florida. But it didn't go gangbusters until last year, when it inked a three-year deal with the College Board, the company that oversees AP.
It takes time for all the pieces — more student support, more teacher training, new teaching strategies — to gel, said Eric Bergholm, who directs Hillborough's AP programs and was once principal at South Tampa's Plant High, as well-oiled an AP factory as there is in the country.
"You have to be realistic," Bergholm said. "As times goes on, in three years, four years, five years, everything is going to look different."
• • •
The new face of AP is shy, soft-spoken and rosy cheeked.
Cydni lives with her mom and 14-year-old brother in Ruskin, along with two dogs and two horses. They have one neighbor named Peachy, and another who drives a double-decker swamp buggy that would be at home on My Big Redneck Wedding.
Cydni doesn't wear her heart on her sleeve. But it's on the girly-girl pink of her bedroom walls: a flock of Tinker Bells, 14 ribbons for raising chickens and cows, and enough orange and blue to make a Seminole gag.
Gator lamp. Gator license plate. Gator slippers.
"I really want to go to UF," Cydni said. "The No. 1 vet school. That's where I want to be."
Taking AP classes, she was told, would help her get there. But she worried before signing up. So did her mom, Cynthia Liles, a tropical fish farmer.
The teachers made no bones about it: AP was hard. And Cydni had been an average student. She took some standard classes, some honors. Did good in math. Okay in English.
East Bay looked at Cydni's GPA, her standardized test scores, her discipline record and teacher recommendations. They said she was AP material.
So with visions of Tim Tebow dancing in her head, Cydni dove in — and floundered.
As if Mesopotamia and the spread of Buddhism weren't exotic enough, Cydni had to master what 10 years of schooling somehow failed to teach her: how to take good notes. How to write clear essays. How to discipline herself enough to read 20 pages every other night.
When she got the F, Cydni thought, "My mom's going to kill me."
When Mom saw the F, she thought, There goes the Bright Futures scholarship.
"I want to support my children, but I want a happy medium," said Liles, who graduated from Ruskin Christian School and spent a year at Liberty University in Virginia.
Who wants their kid to fail?
• • •
Late April. A Saturday morning. In Room 006, 14 tenth-graders — half white; half black or Hispanic — are going over a 70-question practice test with Hueber.
"They're going to ask you the definition of feudalism," he says. "What is it?"
Silence.
Hueber slumps his shoulders.
"A political system," a girl offers.
"A political system," Hueber affirms.
Dale Hueber, 53, bristles with urgency. He spent 22 years in the Army, retired as a lieutenant colonel, then went into teaching. He has been doing it eight years, all at East Bay.
He makes no apologies for being old school. No slang. No gimmicks. He expects his students to learn the material, and if they fall short, he may cock his head to the side, or sigh, or say, "Oh God, come on."
Hueber is no-nonsense about Hillsborough's AP vision, too.
When he first started teaching AP World History five years ago, he had one class with 13 students. The cream of the crop. Now he has four classes and 83 students. The top kids are still there. But so are some who are marginal readers.
Yes, Hueber said, that means teachers must work harder. Yes, some are frustrated. Yes, he thinks the school cracked the AP doors open a little too wide. Yes, a few students have dropped out.
But no, he's not second guessing what the district is doing. Most of the new AP kids are proud enough to try their best, he said. Most are learning something.
And all of them deserve a better shot at the American Dream than other classes were giving them.
"They're stretching me," he said. "I've had to slow down in some cases. I've had to rework some of my instruction. And I'm still not happy about what I'm doing."
But "I know these kids can get it," he said. "If they're not getting there, I'm not doing something right."
• • •
Cydni decided to gut it out.
She attended Mr. Hueber's Saturday sessions. She worked three to four hours every other night. She pulled her first all nighter.
She started thinking, I like learning about revolutions.
Her F has become a C.
"It's passing (but) I think I can do better," Cydni said.
She'll have a chance to prove it next year, when she takes three AP classes.
She signed up for them on her own.
Ron Matus can be reached at matus@sptimes.com or (727) 893-8873.
by the numbers
Growth in AP classes
1.1 million Students nationwide participating in Advanced Placement in 2004.
1.6 million Students nationwide participating in AP in 2008.
68,000 Florida students participating in AP in 2004.
118,000 Florida students participating in AP in 2008.
AP test taken
For decades, AP classes were reserved for the brainiest students, but more and more they are filling up with "average" students as the state and school districts push for increased participation in AP courses. Check out how schools in Pinellas, Hillsborough, Hernando and Pasco stacked up in the number of AP tests between 2004 and 2008.
District
High School
2008 Total Tests Taken
2004 Total Tests Taken
Percent Change 04-08 Tests Taken
Hernando
Central
370
37
900%
Hernando
F W Springstead
296
332
-11%
Hernando
Hernando
170
19
795%
Hernando
Nature Coast Tech
85
Hillsborough
Armwood
575
139
314%
Hillsborough
Bloomingdale
1252
1097
14%
Hillsborough
Brandon
596
232
157%
Hillsborough
Braulio Alonso
1138
429
165%
Hillsborough
Bryan Altern Ctr
1
Hillsborough
C Leon King
1129
931
21%
Hillsborough
Chamberlain
940
568
65%
Hillsborough
Debartolo Collegiate
19
Hillsborough
Dr Earl J Lennard
101
Hillsborough
Durant
654
268
144%
Hillsborough
East Bay
409
66
520%
Hillsborough
Freedom
930
301
209%
Hillsborough
Gaither
1042
508
105%
Hillsborough
H B Plant
2123
1336
59%
Hillsborough
Hillsborough
1218
1096
11%
Hillsborough
Howard W Blake
631
269
135%
Hillsborough
Leto Comp
443
116
282%
Hillsborough
Meacham Altern Ctr
1
Hillsborough
Middleton
439
143
207%
Hillsborough
Newsome
1150
107
975%
Hillsborough
Paul R Wharton
735
461
59%
Hillsborough
Pepin Academy Charter
1
Hillsborough
Plant City
1045
655
60%
Hillsborough
Richard Spoto
314
Hillsborough
Riverview
661
251
163%
Hillsborough
T R Robinson
452
209
116%
Hillsborough
Tampa Bay Tech
719
487
48%
Hillsborough
Thomas Jefferson
368
152
142%
Hillsborough
Walter L Sickles
1159
529
119%
Pasco
Gulf
332
127
161%
Pasco
Hudson
108
47
130%
Pasco
J W Mitchell
476
331
44%
Pasco
Land O Lakes
710
441
61%
Pasco
Pasco Comprhns
123
114
8%
Pasco
Ridgewood
111
145
-23%
Pasco
River Ridge
375
194
93%
Pasco
Sunlake
86
Pasco
Wesley Chapel
179
113
58%
Pasco
Wiregrass Ranch
205
Pasco
Zephyrhills
95
170
-44%
Pinellas
Boca Ciega
556
309
80%
Pinellas
Clearwater
386
376
3%
Pinellas
Countryside
213
241
-12%
Pinellas
Dixie Hollins
69
68
1%
Pinellas
Dunedin
451
261
73%
Pinellas
East Lake
933
821
14%
Pinellas
Eckerd Wilderness
1
Pinellas
Gibbs
628
269
133%
Pinellas
Lakewood
699
540
29%
Pinellas
Largo
101
63
60%
Pinellas
Northeast
166
116
43%
Pinellas
Osceola
175
131
34%
Pinellas
Palm Harbor University
948
864
10%
Pinellas
Pinellas Park
202
174
16%
Pinellas
Seminole
176
266
-34%
Pinellas
St Petersburg Collegiate
6
Pinellas
St Petersburg
770
796
-3%
Pinellas
Tarpon Springs
312
127
146%
Some schools did not have numbers for 2004.
AP tests passed
For decades, AP classes were reserved for the brainiest students, but more and more they are filling up with "average" students as the state and school districts push for increased participation in AP courses. Check out how schools in Pinellas, Hillsborough, Hernando and Pasco stacked up in the number of AP tests passed between 2004 and 2008.
District
High School
2008 Total Passers
2004 Total Passers
Perecnt Change 04-08 Passers
Hernando
Central
156
7
2129%
Hernando
F W Springstead
177
135
31%
Hernando
Hernando
44
14
214%
Hernando
Nature Coast Tech
22
Hillsborough
Armwood
147
63
133%
Hillsborough
Bloomingdale
614
602
2%
Hillsborough
Brandon
188
130
45%
Hillsborough
Braulio Alonso
326
121
169%
Hillsborough
Bryan Altern Ctr
Hillsborough
C Leon King
705
571
23%
Hillsborough
Chamberlain
276
195
42%
Hillsborough
Debartolo Collegiate
Hillsborough
Dr Earl J Lennard
40
Hillsborough
Durant
226
156
45%
Hillsborough
East Bay
126
38
232%
Hillsborough
Freedom
447
109
310%
Hillsborough
Gaither
340
211
61%
Hillsborough
H B Plant
928
714
30%
Hillsborough
Hillsborough
569
694
-18%
Hillsborough
Howard W Blake
153
165
-7%
Hillsborough
Leto Comp
68
56
21%
Hillsborough
Meacham Altern Ctr
Hillsborough
Middleton
131
47
179%
Hillsborough
Newsome
515
71
625%
Hillsborough
Paul R Wharton
289
215
34%
Hillsborough
Pepin Academy Charter
Hillsborough
Plant City
292
240
22%
Hillsborough
Richard Spoto
52
Hillsborough
Riverview
168
114
47%
Hillsborough
T R Robinson
117
68
72%
Hillsborough
Tampa Bay Tech
169
148
14%
Hillsborough
Thomas Jefferson
151
68
122%
Hillsborough
Walter L Sickles
583
302
93%
Pasco
Gulf
111
37
200%
Pasco
Hudson
23
18
28%
Pasco
J W Mitchell
217
171
27%
Pasco
Land O Lakes
345
225
53%
Pasco
Pasco Comprhns
35
47
-26%
Pasco
Ridgewood
55
57
-4%
Pasco
River Ridge
151
80
89%
Pasco
Sunlake
39
Pasco
Wesley Chapel
73
62
18%
Pasco
Wiregrass Ranch
64
Pasco
Zephyrhills
42
61
-31%
Pinellas
Boca Ciega
109
108
1%
Pinellas
Clearwater
130
128
2%
Pinellas
Countryside
158
148
7%
Pinellas
Dixie Hollins
17
19
-11%
Pinellas
Dunedin
155
112
38%
Pinellas
East Lake
545
337
62%
Pinellas
Eckerd Wilderness
Pinellas
Gibbs
177
121
46%
Pinellas
Lakewood
358
293
22%
Pinellas
Largo
49
19
158%
Pinellas
Northeast
60
58
3%
Pinellas
Osceola
68
20
240%
Pinellas
Palm Harbor University
573
599
-4%
Pinellas
Pinellas Park
55
60
-8%
Pinellas
Seminole
118
148
-20%
Pinellas
St Petersburg Collegiate
Pinellas
St Petersburg
372
404
-8%
Pinellas
Tarpon Springs
125
60
108%
Some schools did not have numbers for 2004.
Percentages 3-5 are not shown where the number of test takers is less than 15.
Students must score 3-5 to pass & possibly get college credit.
AP test takers
For decades, AP classes were reserved for the brainiest students, but more and more they are filling up with "average" students as the state and school districts push for increased participation in AP courses. Check out how schools in Pinellas, Hillsborough, Hernando and Pasco stacked up in the number of AP test takers between 2004 and 2008.