With increasing political pressures on academic curricula over the past few decades, what does this look like for the DoDEA’s College and Career Readiness Education Programs? On August 28, 2025, the College Entrance Examination Board was awarded a $9.9 million dollar contract with the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) per the U.S. Department of War contracts through sole-source acquisition. The DoDEA has continued to partner with College Board to provide military-connected students with Advanced Placement (AP) programs and scholarships such as BigFuture.
The DoDEA leverages the College Board’s curricula and nationally recognized standardized assessments for post-secondary preparation and college readiness. According to the DoDEA press release in October 2024, AP courses are used “as part of DoDEA curriculum offerings, emphasize open-mindedness and intellectual growth by grounding lessons in primary sources and encouraging students to form their own conclusions.” Military-affiliated high school students who attend DoDEA schools participate in the AP exams and scholarships from both the College Board and other organizations via its search feature, which includes the Department of Defense Dependents Schools (DoDDS) that began in 1978 to provide overseas support. Its Blueprint for Continuous Improvement 2025 strategizes four key goals based on student, school, talent, and organizational excellence. Led by DoDEA Director, Dr. Beth Schiavino-Narvaez, this strategy proposes ‘Student Excellence’ through multi-tiered and future-ready learning approaches that include:
- School team process improvement to strengthen standards-based core instruction and data-informed interventions
- Student preparedness for college coursework
- High school student participation and proficiency in college-level coursework
This blueprint serves to guide the DoDEA’s mission of education, engagement, and empowerment to military-connected students through 2030 and beyond.
Curriculum and Legal Controversies
Over the past few decades, the curricula have faced challenges in response to the nation’s sociopolitical climate and ideological biases. For example, the College Board’s Senior Vice President and Head of AP Program, Trevor Packer, sought to have the AP U.S. History curriculum rewritten in the early 2000’s through a committee of history professionals. The revised framework in 2012 ignited discussions over left-leaning “woke curriculum” that included gender-fluidity studies and race concepts.
Fast forward to 2023, the College Board was perceived as conceding to political pressures regarding its revised AP African American Studies course framework pilot. Florida’s Department of Education letter to the College Board on January 12, 2023 criticized its topics such as intersectionality and Critical Race Theory, thus banning the AP course. The current version does keep intact the reparations debate. President Trump’s Executive Order, Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History, now advocates for right-leaning “patriotic” education influence on curricula in schools across the nation. Restrictions on how and what history is taught are additionally subject to state policies and laws.
The College Board continues to face legal and political challenges. Last year in February 2024, College Board paid $750,000 in penalties for the mismanagement and monetization of student data based on the Attorney General of the State of New York, though College Board disagreed in their statement on February, 13, 2024. On September 4, 2025, the College Board canceled its “Landscape” tool used by admissions to provide socioeconomic information following the Supreme Court’s ban on affirmative action in 2023 and the Trump Administration’s federal requirement to expose colleges and universities using ‘hidden racial proxy’ discriminatory tools in August 2025. These impacts, sometimes interpreted as an attack on diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, may continue to shape educational content or procedures despite the College Board’s insistence that political pressure has no bearing.
In terms of competing policy-making interest content, essential knowledge components appear aligned between McGraw Hill’s American Democracy Now and AP U.S. Government Politics Framework. These correlations can be found in the Advanced Placement Correlation Guide for its government course with some non-partisan highlights below (guide not officially endorsed by College Board).
- PMI-5.E.1: Interest groups may represent very specific or more general interests, and can educate voters and office holders, draft legislation, and mobilize membership to apply pressure on and work with legislators and government agencies.
- PMI-5.G.1: Single-issue groups, ideological/social movements, and protest movements form with the goal of impacting society and policy making.
- PMI-5.C.4: Parties use communication technology and voter-data management to disseminate, control, and clarify political messages and enhance outreach and mobilization efforts.
- PMI-4.B.1: Because the U.S. is a democracy with a diverse society, public policies generated at any given time reflect the attitudes and beliefs of citizens who choose to participate in politics at that time.
- PRD-3.B.2: The rapidly increasing demand for media and political communications outlets from an ideologically diverse audience have led to debates over media bias and the impact of media ownership and partisan news sites.
A similar AP correlation for United States History & Geography or United States History: Voices and Perspectives could not be found. For more information on the DoDEA’s contracted primary instructional resources that support the instruction and learning of their College and Career Ready program, see the DoDEA College and Career Ready Instructional Resources document.
How the College Board Influences DoDEA Curriculum
All DoDEA AP courses are approved by College Board's curriculum requirements through the AP course audit designation, which are developed for academic rigor, quality, and consistency. Military-affiliated students are provided with access and testing to help them achieve academic success and preparation for college-level reading, writing, and mathematics. It also assists the DoDEA and educators with the data tools to address instruction, skills gaps, and curriculum improvement. The DoDEA’s partnership with the College Board supports their strategic objectives to better support mobile, military families with college and career coursework, planning, and academic learning.
Both philosophies of the DoDEA and College Board promote students meeting educational core competencies and college readiness. The DoDEA emphasizes student well-being, critical thinking skills, and pursuit of life-long knowledge. The DoDEA additionally encourages ‘habits and dispositions in multiple subjects’ for their graduates in their College and Career Ready Standards. College Board, a not-for-profit organization older than a 100 years, espouses college and career pathways, skills development, and student resources.
What Comes Next
The DoDEA’s College and Career Readiness Education Programs future with the College Board rests on ongoing accountability and balance over the curriculum and processes. The strengths in this partnership enable nationally recognized assessment delivery, scholarship opportunities, and access to greater college pathways with both stability and consistency. The DoDEA’s Blueprint for Continuous Improvement 2025 elaborates on its commitment to be adaptable to challenges while maintaining resiliency as military families navigate various education systems and changes in a dynamic world. It is more important than ever that both the DoDEA and College Board demonstrate their own resilience, neutrality, and responsiveness to the communities they serve in the increasingly shifting political and social environment. This, in turn, encourages educators, policymakers, and military families advocacy that focuses on the diverse needs of military-connected students.