College Board
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The College Board is a non-profit examination board in the USA, comprised of over 4,500 institutions of higher learning. It is known principally for managing standardized tests such as the SAT, PSAT, CLEP and the subject-specific SAT Subject Tests and Advanced Placement tests. The SAT, the most well known of these, is a test widely used for admission to universities in the United States, which over 3 million prospective college students take yearly. All of the tests are actually administered by the Educational Testing Service, which is the world's largest private educational measurement organization that also administers other tests like the GRE and TOEFL.
The College Board also supervises the Advanced Placement Program. Students in the later years of high school can take certain advanced courses, after which they take an AP test; many colleges will treat them as having taken an equivalent college-level credit class depending on their score. AP tests are scored on a scale of 1-5, 5 being the highest. Different colleges have differing requirements for score levels and test areas that they will accept. Some colleges will accept a 2 or above on an AP test as college credit, others a 3 or 4. AP test subjects include English language and literature, foreign languages and literature, economics, history, geography, art, computer science, natural science, mathematics, government, psychology, and music.
The Board's headquarters are in New York City.
See Also
External links
- College Board website (http://www.collegeboard.com/)
- About the College Board (http://www.collegeboard.com/about/index.html)
- The College Board's tests (http://www.collegeboard.com/testing/)