Dr. Zachary Robbins: Practical Strategies to Expand Advanced Course Access Without Lowering Standards
Dr. Zachary Robbins is an educator and former superintendent who has led classrooms and school systems focused on equity and rigor. Beginning as a high school English teacher in 1996 in Washington DC and Maryland, Dr. Zachary Robbins later taught in Boston before moving into administration in 2003. He served as principal in Boston and then at Cheyenne High School in Las Vegas, where he managed 2,800 students and 175 employees with a $9 million budget. As superintendent of Marysville School District 25 in Washington through 2024, he advanced initiatives that reduced suspensions by 15 percent, improved attendance and graduation rates, and increased participation in advanced placement courses. A resident of Lake Stevens, Washington, Dr. Zachary Robbins has authored Restorative Justice Tribunal, Becoming a Social Justice Educator, and The Teacher Black Students Need, and written articles for Edutopia. His career aligns closely with expanding access to advanced coursework while maintaining rigor.
Expanding Access to Advanced Courses Without Dilution
Advanced high school courses—such as Advanced Placement (AP), honors, and dual-enrollment classes—offer students the chance to earn college credit and demonstrate readiness for higher study. These classes have a significant impact on admissions, scholarships, and career preparation. Yet access remains unequal. Districts face the challenge of expanding participation while maintaining academic rigor.
Enrollment and performance data reveal persistent disparities. While participation has grown for some groups, others remain underrepresented, with gaps also evident by income and geography. Tracking who enrolls and how students perform helps schools identify inequities and pinpoint areas where change is most urgent.
A key reform is revising entry rules that block qualified students. Strict prerequisites, GPA cutoffs, and teacher approvals often discourage participation. Districts adopting open enrollment—allowing students to register without such barriers—see higher participation among underrepresented groups. Removing gatekeeping policies broadens access while preserving course content and expectations.
Preparation then becomes the focus once students enroll. Schools offer summer bridge programs, tutoring sessions, and study skills workshops to build capacity for advanced coursework. These supports provide students with early exposure to challenging material, helping them adapt to higher expectations. By embedding readiness programs, districts ensure that students enter advanced classes with the necessary tools to succeed.
Teachers also shape whether rigor holds steady. Professional development prepares educators to scaffold assignments, differentiate instruction, and apply consistent grading practices. With these strategies, teachers preserve course difficulty while guiding a broader range of students through demanding material.
Families influence participation as well. Outreach events, targeted communications, and information sessions about advanced coursework encourage families to support enrollment decisions. When parents understand the benefits and the support schools provide, more students attempt classes that once seemed out of reach.
Logistical changes demonstrate that inclusion is more than intent. Expanding access may involve hiring additional teachers, creating new sections, or reshaping schedules so students can balance advanced courses with core requirements. Smaller or rural districts often adapt staffing and course offerings to expand opportunities despite limited capacity. These steps show leaders back equity with tangible investment.
Districts that expand access most effectively also establish policies requiring every high school to offer a range of advanced courses. When states or districts set minimum expectations, students gain opportunities no matter which school they attend. This systemwide commitment prevents uneven access and signals that equity in advanced learning is a shared priority.
Results demonstrate that the effort pays off. Participation is rising across many student groups, with particularly strong gains among those historically excluded. Evaluations confirm that when entry rules are broadened, supports embedded, and teachers trained, both enrollment and performance improve. Equity and rigor move forward together, not in opposition.
The benefits continue into higher education. Students who complete advanced courses are more likely to enroll in four-year colleges and succeed in introductory college classes. These outcomes show that inclusive access produces measurable gains in readiness beyond high school.
Expanding access requires districts to coordinate multiple systems at once. Leaders adjust entry policies, build readiness supports, prepare teachers, engage families, and direct resources toward sustaining these changes. When schools align these measures, advanced courses serve a wider range of students and deliver long-term benefits that reach into college and careers.
About – Dr. Zachary Robbins
Dr. Zachary Robbins is a former superintendent of Marysville School District 25 and longtime educator who began teaching high school English in 1996. He later led schools in Boston and served as principal of Cheyenne High School in Las Vegas. His leadership has included reducing suspensions, improving attendance and graduation rates, and increasing advanced placement participation. Dr. Robbins has authored three books on equity and restorative practices and contributed articles to Edutopia. He holds degrees from Howard University, Boston College, and the University of Phoenix.