Questions about Roe v. Wade won鈥檛 be included on next year鈥檚 Advanced Placement U.S. Government and Politics exam, following the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 overturning of the ruling in June.
The College Board, the organization that runs the AP program, announced the decision in a message to AP U.S. Government and Politics teachers in July. Roe has been a required case in the course framework since the 2018-19 school year.
In the message, the College Board explained that the choice to remove questions about Roe has to do with how the AP tests are created. The exams are written years in advance, so questions about Roe as a legal precedent slated for the 2023 test 鈥渁re at risk of becoming inaccurate and confusing to students,鈥 the message reads.
The College Board plans to evaluate whether and how Roe will be included in future exams and provide an update to teachers in the fall.
The organization鈥檚 decision is just one example of how the Supreme Court鈥檚 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization, which ruled that the U.S. Constitution does not protect a right to abortion, will change the way that social studies and government teachers discuss certain constitutional issues. Teachers and curriculum writers will need to shape new lessons on the right to privacy鈥攁nd on the way that the court uses precedent to inform its judgments.
鈥淚t鈥檚 such a big shift,鈥 said Kerry Sautner, the chief learning officer at the National Constitution Center, which provides resources and lessons for teachers.
In government or social studies classes, Roe is typically taught as an example of precedent, Sautner said. But now that precedent has been overturned.
That鈥檚 also what happened with the AP course. As part of its framework for AP U.S. Government and Politics, released for the 2018-19 school year, the College Board named 15 Supreme Court cases that students must know to understand significant legal precedents. Questions about these cases are fair game for the AP test.
Roe was on that list鈥攐ne of three cases included to illustrate how certain rights, like the right to privacy or the right to an attorney, have been 鈥渟electively incorporated by way of the Fourteenth Amendment鈥檚 due process clause to prevent state infringement of basic liberties,鈥 according to a statement from the College Board.
An opportunity to discuss constitutional interpretation
Allison Cohen, an AP government teacher at Langley High School in McLean, Va., said that she still plans to cover Roe and Dobbs in class, even if they won鈥檛 be on the AP test. But she understands the College Board鈥檚 decision.
鈥淲ith something that鈥檚 this raw and new, I鈥檓 sympathetic to them not wanting to write questions that might be confusing to students a year from now,鈥 she said.
It鈥檚 possible that not all AP teachers will take this route, though. State legislation restricting how teachers can discuss race, sex, and gender has put a spotlight on teachers who cover anything that could be deemed 鈥渃ontroversial鈥 in their classes. AP teachers in other social studies subjects have said they鈥檙e rethinking how they connect course content to current events. The College Board has maintained that none of its course standards run afoul of new state legislation.
Cohen, though, said that this new environment hasn鈥檛 changed the way she teaches about the Constitution and court cases.
She鈥檚 always talked with her students about the idea of constitutional originalism鈥攎eaning that the Constitution should be interpreted as fixed, having the same meaning that it did when written鈥攙s. the idea of living constitutionalism, that interpretation of the document can change as circumstances and social attitudes do. She plans to use Dobbs and Roe to talk about these ideas this year.
And the cases are still relevant to the idea of precedent鈥攖hey just raise new questions about when and why it鈥檚 appropriate to overturn precedent, and how that might affect other cases that were decided around a right to privacy, Cohen said.
鈥淚t really is about digging a little bit deeper into these fundamental questions of our constitutional democracy,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ow do we go about determining what rights should be judicially recognized? How do we protect those rights? How should this document be interpreted in light of changes that have occurred over the centuries? And what is the proper vehicle to do that?鈥
Importantly, she wants students to come away from these discussions with the understanding that they can agree or disagree with Supreme Court decisions and that they can advocate for changes they want to see in the process or the outcomes鈥斺渢hat they are active players in this democratic republic,鈥 Cohen said.
鈥淭he Supreme Court doesn鈥檛 provide the 鈥榬ight鈥 answer to a particular question. It produces finality鈥攁 final answer, or a final-for-now answer,鈥 she said. 鈥淪tudents have this default ... respect for authority. And it鈥檚 kind of an opportunity to say, 鈥楴o, no, no, maybe your arguments are better.鈥欌