AP® Scholars - 2021
Twenty-six GHS Advanced Placement® Scholars Named
Thirteen graduates of Grayling High School and 13 current seniors have earned the designation of AP® Scholar by the College Board in recognition of their exceptional achievement on the college-level Advanced Placement Exams.
The College Board recognizes several levels of achievement based on the number of courses and exams taken.
Seventeen GHS students qualified as AP Scholars, a designation given to those students who receive scores of 3 or higher on three or more AP Exams:
Noah Abney
Class of 2021
Alora Cobb
Class of 2021
Kaitlyn Hall
Class of 2021
Madison Hall
Class of 2021
Sean Hilliker
Class of 2021
Alex Holliday
Class of 2021
Lillian Kengel
Class of 2021
Katelyn Moore
Class of 2021
Jacob Schade
Class of 2021
Three students qualified for the AP Scholar with Honor Award, which is granted to students who receive an average grade of at least 3.25 on all AP exams taken and scores of 3 or higher on four or more AP Exams:
Anthony Harrington
Class of 2021
Kayleigh Paulus
Class of 2021
Andrew Walsh
Class of 2021
One student qualified for the AP Scholar with Distinction designation, which is granted to students who receive an average score of at least 3.5 on all AP exams taken and scores of 3 or higher on five or more of these exams:
Evan Renn
Class of 2021
Grayling High School has offered AP classes since 1980. The first course offered was English Composition. Since that time, the program has expanded, and students are now able to take AP courses in biology, calculus (AB and BC), statistics, chemistry, English language and literature, psychology, Spanish language and literature, U.S. history and European history. Students at GHS have also taken AP exams in French, German, human geography, physics, U.S. government and world history through independent study.
The number of GHS students taking AP exams has steadily increased over the years, with 79 students taking a total of 134 exams last year. In addition, test scores continue to be above the state and national averages.
To find out more about the Advanced Placement Program, you can visit its website.