African American AP course now offered to high schools across the U.S.

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By Claretta Bellamy, NBC News

The College Board introduced the pilot program to 60 high schools in the hope it will “inspire students with a fuller appreciation of the American story.”

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. leads marchers at the start of a five-day march to Montgomery in 1965. (Associated Press)

For the first time in academic history, high school students across the nation now have the option to take an African American Advanced Placement course.

As part of the new pilot program introduced by the College Board, which developed the course curriculum with high school teachers at Howard University, 60 schools across the U.S. will offer the new AP class as part of their fall curriculum. Additional schools are expected to be added during the pilot’s second year.

“AP African American Studies will introduce a new generation of students to the amazingly rich cultural, artistic, and political contributions of African Americans,” said Trevor Packer, senior vice president of AP and instruction at the College Board. “We hope it will broaden the invitation to Advanced Placement and inspire students with a fuller appreciation of the American story.”

The African American AP course is the College Board’s first course since 2014 and the 40th course it has developed. The program has the potential to impact thousands of high school students who can enroll in the course and receive college credit.

Finishing reading about this course and the schools that will offer it.

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