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Saving the AP in Italian. Is it just a question of money?

Anthony Julian Tamburri (July 12, 2009)

Some not-too-random thoughts on the current situation of the Advanced Placement Program in Italian and who else might be able to come to the rescue…

What follows, then, is a brief history of the outcomes of the Advanced Placement Exam in Italian that was only recently approved in 2005 and launched in 2006—yes, only four years ago—as the fourth of seven language exams that were offered this past spring by the College Board.

It is also an implicit call to arms, if we are to rescue the AP in Italian from its current state of suspended animation.

 What one sees is a dramatic increase over the first four years that, many of us would contend, is due to the greater work by the Italian-American community at large (teaching and non-teaching) to get the word out, so to speak; and there is no reason to believe that this will not continue, especially since this is uncharted territory for Italian language studies. The numbers clearly speak for themselves. From year to year, there has been a dramatic rise, especially from year two to year three (plus 17.5%), and from year three to year four (plus 25.7%). From year one to year four, the growth has been even more dramatic, a numerical increase of 830 exams taken, which translates into an aggregate percentage increase in three years of what can only be considered an outstanding 51.9%.



AP Italian Language and Culture Examination Volume Changes
 

Year

Number of Exams

Annual Percent Change

Aggregate Percent Change

2009

2,427*

+25.7%

+51.9%

2008

1,930

+17.5%

+20.9

2007

1,642

+ 2.8%

2006

1,597

               *Unofficial number furnished by a member of the exam committee.


 
In January 2009, the College Board decided that the exam was no longer economically feasible, and the figures that were presented to reinstate the exam were overwhelming; for one year, $1,500,000, only if, as some have understood, this constituted the beginning of a larger amount that would be raised annually in order to reach an eventual sum total of $11,500,000. The requisite number of exams originally expected by the College Board for Italian, as I have understood it, was 10,000; and because that number, or something vaguely close to it, has not materialized, outside funding is thus obligatory. Yet, the numbers of those taking the exam for German average around 5,000, give or take a few hundred. As we understand it, outside funding is not obligatory. The obvious question is, Why is Italian being held to a different standard? There has been no response forthcoming.


 
At a meeting held with the College Board this past April 20, 2009 (present also were representatives of the Italian Embassy, the NY Consulate, and COPILAS), we found out that the 2,400-plus exams ordered at that time were equal to the CB’s projections for 2014. At that same meeting, we had asked if the costs could then be recalculated, given this change. I had also requested  at the April meeting that the 2010 exam not be cancelled precisely because, I underscored, we needed to see if this significant rise in numbers over a two-year period (2007-2009: 785 students, 47.8%) does in fact constitute the beginning of a trend.


 
After our April meeting I did indeed receive a response with regard to funding, which underscored (1) the need for $11.M, as the increase in students for this spring’s exam, in the CB’s opinion, has very little to no consequence in reducing funds, (2) a contract with an entity or individual who guarantees the full amount of $11.5, (3) and until these first two conditions are met the exam will not be re-instated.

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A number of things thus stand out at first blush. In addition to the obvious “Why is Italian being held to a different standard?,” one might indeed ponder how an organization that relies so much on statistical data can use only three years as a measuring stick. I suspect that in this case independent statisticians might argue otherwise, that more time and, indeed, more data (read, sittings and grades of the exam) are necessary. Another issue that comes to mind is that there seems to be no one within the College Board administration (i.e., the national Board of Trustees) who might readily argue—namely, who might possess the requisite knowledge and thus be prepared to argue—for the continuation of the Advanced Placement Program in Italian. This is a question of cultural awareness and sensitivity, something that we as individuals acquire according to our life-long, quotidian existence, which is rooted in both the social and the professional.


 
The Italian language has always been a cultural vehicle, though in the United States for, perhaps, close to a century, if not longer, it was considered primarily—and in this regard I would say unfortunately—an ethnic language by mainstream thinking and organizations (yes, in spite of Dante et alii). The significant cultural valence of Italian has never been more obvious than over the past thirty-plus years, with the advent of Italian cinema and fashion first and foremost, the creation of the various “enti gestori” funded by the Italian government, and a rebirth in the translation of contemporary Italian writers and essayists such as Italo Calvino, Oriana Fallaci, Umberto Eco, and Dacia Maraini, among others.  The individual who possesses such social, professional, and, I would now, add cultural acumen and insight does not seem to occupy a place on the national Board of Trustees of the College Board. This is, to be sure, part and parcel of the challenge that lies ahead. Such a lack of cultural, ethnic, and racial discernment and mindfulness lies at the base of the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s; similar comprehension and acknowledgement eventually led to the classification of Italian Americans as a “protected class” within the CUNY system for comparable reasons, a situation very much still unresolved.


 
Thus, it should not seem a stretch to consider the absence of such ethnic and cultural sensitivity as yet a further stepping stone in this struggle to save the Advanced Placement Program in Italian—a language and culture that have given to Civilization the roots of modern western poetry (Dante and Petrarca), the template for what we call Modernity (the philosophy and art of the Italian Renaissance), and the matrix for our own modern-day legal philosophy (Cesare Beccaria), should simply not be cast aside because of  a budget that has yet to be explained in great detail and/or any other reasons unbeknownst to the public discourse thus far articulated.


 
This is a struggle in which we all must engage; it is not the right of any one person or entityu to do so. Instead, we need to move as a collective. Furthermore, we need to reach out to our elected officials on all levels—national, state, and local. They, more than most of us, are in a strategically, strong position to put pressure on such monolithic, and dare I say monopolizing, entities, such as the College Board. A not-for-profit should not be concerned primarily with profit when deciding the future of an exam that was given only three years to develop, all of which raises doubts to the commitment to the project in the first place. Various financially successful AP exams do indeed fund others; that said, Italian should not be excluded without the requisite opportunity (read, time) to develop. This should be totally unacceptable to all of us, and the Italian/American community needs to express it/our indignation in as many venues as possible, beginning with those in the more influential positions to do so.

Collective response and support

Anthony,

thank you for this detailed update and contextualization. Besides the crucial role of "those in the more influential positions" in voicing their support and acting accordingly, it seems that we also need a more critical mass of voices. Can we think of a short standard message to be copy-pasted into an email and sent to a selected representative of the CB? This way, HS and college students, HS teachers and college/university professors, parents, government officials, HS principals, college/university administrators, non-profit organizations and last but not least the Italian American community at large through individuals and associations can voice a request - firmly and gently at once - for clarity on the various issues on the table: annual targets for number of exam takers, amounts of funds requested, past and future allocation of funds, comparative data vis-a-vis the other languages/exams, implementation of cost-cutting operations, etc.

Also, once the final amount has been agreed upon based on cogent explanations, why not considering a mobile phone fundraising? As AATI it should be possible to do it through an organization providing this kind of service. The promotion for the initiative would travel through the existing channels - email, targeted TV and radio channels, list-serves, newsletters, blogs, etc. within the Italian and Italian American communities - while the donation requires a simple txt message. It potentially reaches many people whose support can be easily effected and swiftly received. Even if small, the support becomes precious as part of a collective effort.

I won't comment on all the other important parallel forms of work and intervention involving large numbers of people in different capacities in promoting the Italian language in this country through the AP and many many other projects. These above are concrete ideas to consider as we face the Oct. 15 deadline, which seems to force us now into simply writing the "chronicle of a death foretold."

Thanks again for all the work you are doing for this cause. Even though the AP issue seems to address only a small aspect of the language promotion, in reality it involves many areas at once (HS system, Higher Education, teacher-training and credentialing, etc.), and can potentially travel down the K-12 vertical structure in terms of language program expansion.

Tamburri's picture

reply

hello all, unfortunately the site never prompted me to your responses to my op ed, and we are looking into it. in any event, there is as of yesterday another manner of responding to the college board, and that is through a legal reaction. there is yet another organization that wants to look into the net annual earnings of the CB and how they can make what they make and expect one language (Italian) pay all the money they require for 2,500 students when another language such as German doe not have to pay for 5,500 students. the difference in revenues the CB takes in for these two exams is about $255,000. so why $11.5M? that's one of the questions to be asked...

more later, i hope.

ciao, anthony

reply

hi, i was never notified of your comment

a different perspective on "la bella lingua"

Dott. Tamburri,

After studying Italian for twenty-plus years and writing a book and a blog about the language, I firmly believe that Italian—no less than Michelangelo’s sculptures, Verdi’s operas or Valentino’s dresses—is a masterpiece, However, it is the least appreciated of Italy’s many gifts to the world.

Unfortunately, not many people—including Italians in Italy as well as Italo-Americans--know Italian’s rich and rollicking history. I am convinced that the more that Italians appreciate their language, the greater their support will be for teaching it to others. The most common (and gratifying) response I’ve gotten from readers is, “You’ve given me a new reason for being proud to be Italian.”

There also are vast numbers of non-Italian admirers of Italy and its culture. (I’m told that the historically correct term is “Italici.”) They too know far more about Italian art, music, food, fashion and film than about its language. Yet I’ve heard from many who are delighted to learn the story of Italian. Their children, like my own daughter, often become second-generation Italianophiles and study the language, if not in high school, then in college.

Another approach to building support for the AP exam is to foster greater awareness and appreciation of Italian among Italian-Americans and the greater population.

Dianne Hales Author of LA BELLA LINGUA: My Love Affair with Italian, the World’s Most Enchanting Language

www.labellalingua.org

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hi, i was never notified of your comment

Italian AP

Bravo signor Tamburri, this is exactly what we have all been shouting about for the past year. Italian Language task forces were formed across the nation and the number of students taking the exam increased by 25 %. The Italian Language Foundation collected half a million dollars to try to save the test, a mere drop in the bucket based on the numbers you have stated. And that is another problem, the amount needed to save the test fluctuates wildly from 1.5 million to now 11.5 million; why such huge discrepancies? Wouldn't putting the exam online save printing costs, shipping costs, traveling costs for readers, and so on? Where do they come up with their numbers? If they say that other countries subsidize their test, i.e. the Chinese and the Japanese, then who subsidizes the Latin test, the Vatican or the Roman Empire??? I too get the feeling that the CB never took this undertaking seriously, the took the initial money to develop the test and now will not give it the time necessary to flourish. They have cut off the flower before it could bloom. We need to get this article out to the general public and to the Italian-American community. It needs to be re-published in every Italian-American publication across the country.

response

hi, i was never notified of your comment

rconte's picture

Copy and Paste

Mr. Tamburri, I know that in one of my blogs, I asked you to step up. All I can say is "atta boy". Unfortunately I have been standing on this podium in my corner of the world for years. As I have stated, it took us 8 years to include Italian Language as a course offering in our High School. No matter how I look at this situation, I have to side with my 70 year old mother "they're all just jealous of us; almost as jealous as we are of each other". I know that may be a narrow minded view; but I am convinced it is fact. Why is German still so widely offered, why do public schools instantaneously initiate a "mandarin" program as that population grows? Don't you ever get that "Don Quixote" feeling? Anyway, just thought we could copy and paste your article into a more secular venue; if we can't reach the CB maybe we can find some deep Armani, D&G, or Versace pockets.

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hi, i was never notified of your comment

Saving the AP in Italian

BRAVO, Anthony.

Well stated, cogently and compellingly presented. I will most assuredly share this essay broadly.

Mary Ann (Director/Coccia Institute at Montclair State University)