College & Workforce Readiness Q&A

An Alternative to AP and IB: How the Cambridge Program Has Found a U.S. Foothold

By Ileana Najarro — November 17, 2025 4 min read
Illustration of school textbooks.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

When offering students the chance to earn college credit in high school, districts across the country often look to the College Board’s Advanced Placement program or the International Baccalaureate.

But a small but growing number of districts also turn to the University of Cambridge’s international education program, which originated from the prestigious university in the United Kingdom.

The pathway program comes in four stages, including two high school stages, one of which can allow students to receive college credit for universities across the United States, said Mark Cavone, the regional director for Cambridge International Education in North America.

Cavone and Matthew Kaye, the North American head of policy, accountability, and partnerships for the organization, spoke with Education Week about what the program offers U.S. students and how it continues to grow in the country.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

What does the Cambridge International Education program offer American high school students, especially in terms of postsecondary preparation?

Cavone: A lot of times, districts offer Cambridge, IB, and AP, because we started [in the U.S.] based on the choice movement in the South. A lot of schools were losing kids, we call it the brain drain, and they thought Cambridge was a really good option to keep kids in the district.

Mark Cavone

I think what we really offer is probably some of the most rigorous coursework in America that culminates in a lot of college credit, and students trying advanced coursework for the first time.

Some of our courses are great foundational courses. Getting a passing grade on Cambridge, AP, or IB, it’s kind of a proxy for college readiness. Our goal is to get as many kids college- and career-ready by the time they leave high school, and passing a Cambridge course that culminates in university credit is a major goal.

[Cambridge has] a mastery-based assessment. And so, just like in college, you’re going to have your blue book, we’re going to go look for points. We’ve heard it’s a little bit fairer and more equitable, maybe for students [who] aren’t first-language English speakers. I think in the South, we probably serve more low-income and minority students than our competitors. We have about 70-plus courses. Many of them are unique.

Kaye: As a former practitioner, I still run into students all the time, and they’ll say things like, “Man, I just did so well in college because I really learned how to write academically, I really learned how to study, or I really learned how to approach thinking at a collegiate level thanks to those Cambridge courses.”

Our students have shown, through partnership research, that they’re thriving at the university level. They graduate on great timelines, and they’re exceeding the average population of those universities. They’re doing extremely well in subsequent courses.

How has the Cambridge program grown in the United States?

Cavone: We started in the late 90s, and we’ve grown to about 25 states. We’re serving a lot of kids that weren’t being served before: a lot of low-income, non-white, minority students.

We really developed in the South, in Florida first. I started here [with Cambridge] 11 years ago, coming from the College Board. I was brought in to run the North American region. I started with about seven staff, and now we have about 45 reporting into the university, about 800 schools right now, 25-plus states. But really, our foothold was in Florida to start, based on school choice and keeping kids in their home districts.

Ninety-five plus percent of what we do is with public school districts. We really like that, because the university really cares about lifting achievement for all kids.

How does the Cambridge program work with American schools to ensure all students have equitable access?

Matthew Kaye

Kaye: I was a senior director of accountability for the school district of Lee County [in Florida]. In implementing it in our district, we found that the real beauty of the Cambridge program was [that] you could do it schoolwide and have really every single student have an opportunity to earn those college-level courses, to go for it, and then as they continued down that pathway, say, “Look, if you’re experiencing success, you can keep going.”

Cavone: We really promote open access. Some schools will want to treat it as a magnet [program]. We don’t love that. But we believe that curriculum is a local construct, and it’s really up to the states or the districts to figure out how they want to serve their local community.

How does the Cambridge program navigate policy concerns and schools’ involvement with DEI efforts?

(Editor’s note: In the last few years, the College Board, one of Cambridge’s competitors in the United States, faced controversies over new courses such as AP African American Studies. Even IB programs have had to navigate policy changes in Florida.)

Cavone: We’re in 160 countries. We have to be flexible, and it’s paramount to meet local requirements, needs, norms, [and] customs. The Cambridge pathway always includes the ability to align courses and local standards with content requirements.

Whether it’s a red state or a blue state, it doesn’t really matter, because we’ve been able to navigate both, because we see those environments across the world.

Related Tags:

Events

Teaching Profession K-12 Essentials Forum Supporting the New K-12 Workforce: What Teachers Need to Stay at School
 Join this free virtual event to discover what teachers say they need to feel supported to stay in classrooms for the long haul.
College & Workforce Readiness K-12 Essentials Forum Career and Technical Education Takes Its Next Big Step
Join this free virtual event to hear creative approaches to modernize CTE programs and navigate the shift away from a near-exclusive focus on "college preparedness."

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

College & Workforce Readiness Schools Are Expanding Career Ed. Are They Guiding Students to the Right Careers?
Counselor shortages are a barrier keeping schools from implementing relevant and effective career prep.
5 min read
20260226 AMX US NEWS FROM PROMISE PAYCHECK HOW DALLAS 4 DA
School counselors Kendall Gray, left, and Gala Davis catch up and talk in Davis' office at South Oak Cliff High School in Dallas on March 6, 2025. As interest in career education rises and schools expand their career and technical education offerings, a new report argues schools lack the staff needed to help students with career counseling that points students toward realistic careers.
Liz Rymarev via TNS
College & Workforce Readiness More States Require Personal Finance. But Does It Actually Work?
Personal finance education can influence behavior positively with specific strategies.
5 min read
Photo illustration of a young black female holding her cellphone in one hand and a credit card in the other. Floating around her in the background are a calculator, pie chart, money, credit card, and piggy bank.
Photo collage by Gina Tomko/Education Week + Canva
College & Workforce Readiness Video How a "Reverse Career Fair" Can Launch High Schoolers Into the Real World
It flips the traditional model and allows students to set up booths to display their talents to employers.
1 min read
20260507 ReverseCareerFair EdWeek R5B 5725
Dustin Chambers for Education Week
College & Workforce Readiness Students Want Career Education. More Research Can Improve It, New Report Says
Career education is in demand from students and could be strengthened through research, a coalition says.
4 min read
Adult school student volunteer Starnese Sims, second from right in glasses, sings along with preschool children at Bradley Early Education Center, located on the campus of Maxine Waters Employment Prep Center, in Watts on May 5, 2026 . Adult school student volunteers visit Bradley EEC twice a week for field work as part of a career pathway that will earn them their child development assistant permit. The setup provides the preschool with extra staffing support and allows for collaboration between preschool teachers and adult school staff as students move through the program. The LAUSD early education center is home to the district's first experiment with non-traditional care hours through its expansion this year into evening child care.
A student volunteer sings along with preschool children at Bradley Early Education Center in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles on May 5, 2026. Older students visit the center regularly as part of a career pathway that will earn them their child development assistant permit. A coalition of education groups wants greater federal investment in research aimed at strengthening career-connected education that students are increasingly demanding.
Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via TNS