I'm not sure I understand; how is a month of instruction time being lost? The AP exams were always in the start of May when I was taking them, so that hasn't changed (although school is now starting in mid-August, versus after Labor Day, so it seems like they are picking up days, not losing them).
I'm not sure about the frequency of standardized tests in other states, but our local high school takes one per year (the cleverly named Iowa Assessments) for a few hours a day for about a week, which is about what I recall from high school, as well, when we took the ironically named Iowa Test of Educational Development, despite the fact that I lived nowhere near Iowa at the time, so those seem to be about the same.
You may be correct, I'm just not understanding where a month of instructional time has been lost since I was in high school.
My earlier post was on my phone, so I condensed my message a lot and wasn't clear in my meaning.
School starts this year August 7th and will end about May 23rd. The AP exams are given the first week of May. So in essence, all instruction and material for AP classes must be learned and completed by the test date. Our schools have 180 days of instruction, but standardized testing including APs starts the first week of May.
For many of the standardized tests (not AP) there are pre tests and assesment tests to see where the students are with the instruction given. So these take extra time out.
I asked DS, who just finished his freshman year in college, about the APs and if he felt summer assignments were necessary and explained why summer assignments were necessary.
Here's our discussion in a nutshell.
Yes, he believed they were necessary for his classes and that having summer assignments allowed them to "hit the ground running" at the beginning of the school year. They didn't have the week lag of getting back into the routine and review before they did new material. Because the students had already done some work over the summer, productive discussions and debates (especially AP US History) could begin immediately.
In his experience, the AP classes were smaller and there was often time for discussion and debates that his other non AP classes couldn't get into. He believes that the APs better prepared him for college work and that "regular" classes were more focused on prepping people to pass standardized tests.
His classes covered between 1 and 3 chapters of material a week in his AP classes with many nights up late, after band or soccer, completing assignments.
He did think some classroom instruction time was lost because of standardized testing and that the teachers did take about a week of class time to review before the AP test.
He was able to get college credit for 4 of his classes, so almost a first semester of college out of the way with his AP scores.