The Advanced Placement Computer Science Principles (APCSP) course was introduced in 2016 to address long-standing gender and racial/ethnic disparities in the United States among students taking Advanced Placement Computer Science (APCS) in high school, as well as among those who pursue computing majors in college. With a unique focus on creative problem-solving and real-world applications, APCSP introduces students to the foundational concepts of computer science and challenges them to explore how computing and technology can impact the broader world.
A collaboration between the Momentum team and the University of Oregon, this project uses data collected by the Cooperative Institutional Research Program (CIRP) Freshman Survey to examine the characteristics and aspirations of college students who had taken APCSA (the “traditional” course) or APCSP (the new course) while in high school. While our first study revealed that there is greater racial/ethnic and gender diversity among students taking APCSP compared to APCSA, our second explored the extent to which APCS course-taking predicts intent to major in a computing field or aspire to a computing career, and whether this differs by gender and race/ethnicity. Results indicated that taking APCSA positively predicted students’ major or career aspirations in computing and technology, but that taking APCSP on its own did not predict long-term computing interest (although positive associations were identified for women).