Laurels
AP Latin

AP Latin Examination
2022 — William Kim

3 August 2022

The AP Latin examination is administered by the College Board and is the only Advanced Placement examination in a classical language. It demands sustained reading of Caesar’s Gallic War and Vergil’s Aeneid in the original Latin — not in translation, not in excerpt, but in the language as it was written. Students are expected to translate with accuracy, analyze with precision, and write about literature in English at a level that colleges will accept as equivalent to university coursework. A score of 5 is the highest the College Board awards. Fewer than twelve percent of students who sat the examination received one in 2022.

William Kim sat the AP Latin examination this past May and received a 5. He will enroll at Princeton University in the autumn — his first choice. The record of how he arrived there is set down below.

AP Latin Examination — 2022
5
Advanced Placement Latin
Highest possible score — College Board
William Kim
Princeton University — Class of 2027
Competition Record

The AP Latin examination is the measure toward which everything in a classical Latin education points. It asks a student to sit with Vergil and Caesar in the original and to give an account of what they find there — not what a translation says, not what a commentary suggests, but what the Latin itself yields to a prepared mind. A score of 5 means that the College Board’s examiners judged that mind to be well prepared indeed.

What makes William’s record worth reading as a whole rather than entry by entry is the breadth of it. The NLVE tests vocabulary. The NCEE tests etymology. The NJCL Convention tests reading, vocabulary, mythology, grammar, history, and derivatives — in the same week, across four separate competitions, all of which he won. SCRIBO asked him to write original Latin prose, which he had never attempted before. And the AP examination asked him to read Vergil and Caesar with the precision of a scholar. He was equal to all of it. Princeton will receive a student who already knows what Latin is for.