AP Seminar is the foundation course taken in 10th or 11th grade. It provides students the opportunity to develop
critical thinking skills and prepare for university. Students explore real-world issues such as
innovation,
sustainability and technology. The assessment culminates in 2 through-course tasks and a final written exam. The through-course tasks are the following • Task 1: An Individual Research Report and a Team Multimedia Presentation • Task description: Students form a team of two to four students to create a presentation on a specific topic based on their Individual Research Reports. Once team members decide on a topic, each member will research a specific perspective of their team topic. For example, if the team project was the ongoing Opioid epidemic, member might research the economic impact of the epidemic, or the socioeconomic factors fueling the epidemic. This research is compiled into a 1080-1320 word Individual Research Report. Once the research reports are finished, students will return to their teams and combine their research into an eight to ten minute presentation. The presentation is followed by oral defense where each team member responds to one question relating to their presentation from a teacher. • Task 2: An Individual Written Argument, Individual Multimedia Presentation, and a set of Oral Defense questions. • Task description: Students are provided stimulus material from the College Board to create an 1800-2200 word argumentative essay. This stimulus material is the same for all students taking AP Seminar. The argument cannot be based solely off the stimulus material, outside research and sources are expected. This argument serves as the foundation for the Individual Multimedia Presentation. Students create a presentation that outlines the argument they made in their previous paper. The presentation is expected to last for six to eight minutes. Following this presentation, students are required to defend their presentation by responding to questions from the teacher grading the presentation. The final written exam is taken during the two weeks of AP testing in May. The exam consists of two sections. In the first section, students are given an article selected by the College Board. Students must evaluate the central claim, line of reasoning, and the evidence of the article. In the second section, students are given four stimulus materials and are expected to create an argumentative essay. Students are allotted two hours for the final exam. == AP Research ==