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This study was conducted to obtain empirical data to inform policy decisions about exempting incoming students from a first-year composition (FYC) course on the basis of Advanced Placement (AP) English exam scores. It examined the effect of avoiding first-year writing on the writing abilities of sophomore undergraduates. Two three-page writing samples were obtained from a subset of 182 sophomore students enrolled in a history of civilization course. Each essay was scored holistically by two readers; the average score across the two papers was used as an index of writing competence. Those who had taken an AP English course and a suitable FYC course performed significantly better than those who had only AP English or only FYC; both latter groups performed less than adequately on the tasks measured. These results indicate that exempting students from college writing based on work done in high school may be unwise because more instruction in writing at college appears to solidify student learning. First-year writing courses that build on strong college preparatory work may best prepare students for writing expected in other college classes. The College Board's support for writing, demonstrated by its including writing on the SAT and founding the National Commission on Writing, appears inconsistent with the aims of its Advanced Placement English program, which may encourage students to take less writing in college by exempting them from FYC altogether.
In September of 2002, the College Board established a National Commission on Writing to, in its own words, "help create a writing revolution in the United States" (2003, p. 7). The Board, a non-profit organization whose mission is "to connect students to college success and opportunity" (College Board, 2005, ¶1), noted that the creation of the commission was partly due to its plans to begin directly assessing writing in the SAT, but that its larger motive "lay in the growing concern within the education, business, and policy-making communities that the level of writing in the United States is not what it should be" (College Board, 2004a, ¶1). The growing concern in various communities is reflected in the membership of the National Commission: The chair is former Nebraska senator Bob Kerrey, and members include Alan Simpson (former senator from Wyoming), David Glass (past president of Wal-Mart), and...