Culture Statement on AP Psychology and Florida - College Board refuses to offer AP Psychology in Florida because they insist on promoting troonism

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
COLLEGE BOARD
August 3, 2023

We are sad to have learned that today the Florida Department of Education has effectively banned AP Psychology in the state by instructing Florida superintendents that teaching foundational content on sexual orientation and gender identity is illegal under state law. The state has said districts are free to teach AP Psychology only if it excludes any mention of these essential topics.

The AP course asks students to “describe how sex and gender influence socialization and other aspects of development.” This element of the framework is not new: gender and sexual orientation have been part of AP Psychology since the course launched 30 years ago.

As we shared in June, we cannot modify AP Psychology in response to regulations that would censor college-level standards for credit, placement, and career readiness. Our policy remains unchanged. Any course that censors required course content cannot be labeled “AP” or “Advanced Placement,” and the “AP Psychology” designation cannot be utilized on student transcripts.

To be clear, any AP Psychology course taught in Florida will violate either Florida law or college requirements. Therefore, we advise Florida districts not to offer AP Psychology until Florida reverses their decision and allows parents and students to choose to take the full course.

We have heard from teachers across Florida who are heartbroken that they are being forced to drop AP and instead teach alternatives that have been deemed legal because the courses exclude these topics.

The American Psychological Association recently reaffirmed that any course that excludes these topics would violate their guidelines and should not be considered for college credit. The APA has given this direct guidance to organizations that have agreed to this censorship.

Similarly, American Council on Education president Ted Mitchell has said: “It strains credulity to believe that our reviewers would certify for college credit a psychology course that didn’t include gender identity.”

The state’s ban of this content removes choice from parents and students. Coming just days from the start of school, it derails the college readiness and affordability plans of tens of thousands of Florida students currently registered for AP Psychology, one of the most popular AP classes in the state. AP is recognized by thousands of colleges and universities across the United States for admissions, scholarships consideration, college credit, and advanced standing. More than 28,000 Florida students took AP Psychology in the 2022-23 academic year.

The AP Program will do all we can do to support schools in their plans for responding to this late change.

Statement from the Development Committee responsible for guiding the AP Psychology course​

We, the AP Psychology Development Committee, are college and high school educators who bring decades of combined knowledge, training, and expertise to the development of the AP Psychology course and exam. We work to ensure the AP Psychology course is aligned with best practices for teaching and learning in introductory psychology and is developmentally appropriate for students and families choosing college-level work. We stand behind the AP Program in its commitment to “not modify courses to accommodate restrictions on teaching essential, college-level topics.” Further, we also believe that accommodating such restrictions “would break the fundamental promise of AP: colleges wouldn’t broadly accept that course for credit and that course wouldn’t prepare students for success in the discipline.” (AP Program, June 2023).

As a committee, we affirm that gender and sexual orientation are essential, longstanding, and foundational topics in the study of psychology. College-level introductory psychology students will encounter gender and sexual orientation as topics of study. Psychology graduates go on to pursue a range of careers and must be able to successfully navigate professional environments that will require familiarity with these concepts. To best prepare these students for college placement and careers in psychology, the topic on gender and sexual orientation will continue to be required in AP Psychology.

We are surprised that IB and AICE/Cambridge—after agreeing to Florida’s demand that they exclude all references to gender and sexual orientation—expect universities to accept their courses and exams for college credit. No experienced educator or practitioner in our field would support the decision to make these topics off limits. We challenge IB and Cambridge to identify the experts whom they consulted prior to deciding that a fundamental component of psychological development would now be banished from the classroom instruction they seek to promote.

Finally, we believe this deliberate exclusion amounts to a material change of AICE/Cambridge’s Psychology course that has historically been recommended for credit by the American Council on Education (ACE). It is our understanding that ACE will be asking its review panel to review this newly restrictive course.
Development Committee Members:
  • Kenneth Carter, PhD, Charles Howard Candler Professor of Psychology, Oxford College of Emory University
  • Elliott Hammer, PhD, John LaFarge Professor in Social Justice, Xavier University of Louisiana
  • Gabriel Marquez, AP Psychology Teacher, Red Mountain High School (AZ)
  • Daria Schaffeld, AP Psychology Teacher, Prospect High School (IL)
  • Allison Shaver, AP Psychology Teacher, Plymouth High School (MA)
  • Gabrielle Smith, PhD, Associate Professor, Texas Women’s University
  • Maria Vita, AP Psychology Teacher, Penn Manor High School (PA)
  • Jason Young, PhD, Professor of Psychology and Chair, Thomas Hunter Honors Program, CUNY – Hunter College
Source (Archive)
 
Last edited:
psych.png
 
Oh no, not psychology. Given the quality offered based off these statements it's sounding as valuable as phrenology.
 
Florida should take a page out of Quebec's book: that is, make your own shit as an alternative to whatever the Anglophones/Trannyphones are doing and force other places to deal with you on your own terms. Hell, Quebec basically opts out of the Canadian Constitution in order to keep French ascendant in their Province.

Florida's like the third most populous state and I'm willing to bet most kids still just go to a State school... so make your own de-fag-ified version of AP, make FSU accept it as equivalent, and eventually it'll just become "Florida doesn't do AP, they do this other thing instead".

I shudder to think what the next Democrat Governor of FLA is going to do to that State, though...
 
Good, psychology is a psuedoscience. It's papers fail to replicate 80% of the time. It's mostly exists to push for demoralization of the population and pharmaceutical profits.
I will never forget reading how someone asked if they could take a stupid neurotransmitter precursor (5-HTP) during pregnancy, and got told no, take something like Prozac instead.

Like I do not grasp how that makes any sense.

Psychiatrists are legal drug pushers.

That said, psychologists cannot give you drugs and are therefore not usually inclined towards them as there is no profit motive.
 
that teaching foundational content on sexual orientation and gender identity is illegal
From what I understand, all the Florida law does is require parents be notified when certain topics are taught.

And when did poonerizing 15 year old girls become "foundational content" anyways? Shouldn't a survey course for high schoolers be teaching what the various schools of thought think about the various topics? Skinner, Jung, Beck, Freud (maybe just to make fun of), etc.
 
Ah yes, the course that BPD bitches select in order to learn how to manipulate others further
What a loss, truly
 
Florida's anti-grooming laws exclusively target middle schoolers and below, in what universe does AP psychology run afoul of that?
I fucking wish their anti-LGBT shit was as extreme as every leftie bureaucrat imagines it is.
 
Florida's anti-grooming laws exclusively target middle schoolers and below, in what universe does AP psychology run afoul of that?
I fucking wish their anti-LGBT shit was as extreme as every leftie bureaucrat imagines it is.
They extended it up to 12th grade after the media outrage died down:
The amendment prohibits classroom instruction to students in pre-kindergarten through grade 3 on sexual orientation or gender identity. For grades 4 through 12, instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity is prohibited unless such instruction is either expressly required by state academic standards as adopted in Rule 6A-1.09401, F.A.C., or is part of a reproductive health course or health lesson for which a student’s parent has the option to have his or her student not attend.
Source (Archive)
 
We are sad to have learned that today the Florida Department of Education has effectively banned AP Psychology in the state by instructing Florida superintendents that teaching foundational content on sexual orientation and gender identity is illegal under state law. The state has said districts are free to teach AP Psychology only if it excludes any mention of these essential topics.
This is like saying that making it illegal to molest children "effectively bans babysitting". It's such a bizarre leap of logic it almost doesn't feel like a human being made this argument.

They could have made any number of slimy, two-faced arguments that would have been more palatable to normies, but instead they went with "grooming and psychology are synonymous". I'm truly astounded.
 
What does letter people bullshit have to do with basic psychology?
The AP course asks students to “describe how sex and gender influence socialization and other aspects of development.”

So propaganda.. got it!
 
Back
Top Bottom