- They can be transferred between schools (for example, a student taking an AP World History course in one school or nation in the fall can transfer to another school and continue with the same course in the winter if the new school offers it).
- They provide students with rigorous course work and demonstrate to university admissions departments that the student is studying the most difficult classes available.
- If the student’s university is willing to give credit for courses taken, it can result in significant tuition savings (for example, a student could take ten or fifteen AP courses in high school and end up with a couple or three terms of university core studies under his belt if some or all of the AP courses are similar enough to courses offered by the university).
- Because of the standardisation, colleges and universities can understand exactly what a student’s transcript implies, especially if it includes AP and/or IB Diploma courses.