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Removing Barriers to College Credits: Where and for Whom AP Exam Fee Waivers Work

Do policies that broaden educational access also foster success? We study this question in the context of North Carolina’s universal Advanced Placement (AP) exam fee waiver policy. Using student-course level administrative data, we exploit within-student variation on a sample of students who took multiple AP courses to estimate the policy’s effect on exam participation (access) and pass rates (success). We find that fee waivers significantly increased exam participation but had no overall effect on the pass rate for these enrollees. This, however, masks a robust 3 percentage point increase in the pass rates among low-SES students. We also find imprecise but suggestive evidence of gains among underrepresented minorities (non-Asian and non-White). A complementary analysis, leveraging the full sample of AP courses, shows that fee waivers had the greatest impact in courses where predicted financial barriers to exam participation were highest, and that the policy’s benefits far exceed its cost. Finally, our results help reconcile the seemingly disparate findings from prior work on AP exam funding.

Keywords
Advanced Placement, Fee waivers, Exam Participation, College Credit Attainment
Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/df8y-4q69
EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:
Rahman, Md Twfiqur, and M. Cade Lawson. (). Removing Barriers to College Credits: Where and for Whom AP Exam Fee Waivers Work. (EdWorkingPaper: -1345). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/df8y-4q69

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