Situated in Baltimore, Maryland, the beautiful and sprawling Homewood campus is the main campus of Johns Hopkins University’s Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences. The Homewood campus is home to a large and diverse student population of undergraduate and full- and part-time graduate students. The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, located on the Homewood campus is the university’s principal research library and the largest of a network of libraries at Hopkins. AAP students also have access to the Student Union.
Homewood Campus Programs:
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Situated in the heart of Washington, DC, The Johns Hopkins University Bernstein Offit Building at 1717 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. is just two blocks from the Dupont Circle metro stop. This is the main administrative office for Advanced Academic Programs. Admissions, Registration, Career Services, Student and Faculty Services, and Information Technology, are located here. The Washington, DC Center offers a dynamic learning environment that includes a Library Resource Center, faculty and student lounges, 31 classrooms and seminar rooms, distance learning classrooms, three computer labs, and a large presentation room.
Washington DC Center Programs:
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Located in one of the nation’s leading biotechnology clusters, the Montgomery County Campus at the Shady Grove Life Sciences Center has become a major educational resource for Montgomery County and the surrounding Washington, DC, area. Facilities and services include 40 classrooms, a state-of-the- art biotechnology teaching laboratory, four computer labs, a distance-learning classroom, a resource center, a 300-seat auditorium, 150-seat presentation room, faculty and student lounges, vending areas, and a campus cafe.
Montgomery County Campus Programs:
Learn more about the Montgomery County Campus
Driving directions, public transportation and parking
AAP delivers all online courses through the Blackboard learning management system. Blackboard is the backbone of the AAP online classroom, but it’s the robust educational model designed by our instructional design team that distinguishes AAP’s online learning environment from that of peer institutions. The online courses follow the traditional semester schedule and are asynchronous. Neither the students nor the instructor are expected to be online at a particular time. Optional synchronous activities such as exam reviews, office hours, and guest speakers are sometimes used as well, as long as they are recorded and made available to students who cannot attend. All courses are participatory; students are expected to interact with their instructor(s) and with each other throughout the semester. Online students receive the same Johns Hopkins education that our on-ground students receive.
Online Programs: