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AP French Exam Info

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The AP French Language and Culture Exam will test your ability to apply communication and language skills developed in the course and ask you to demonstrate your understanding of French-speaking cultures. 

In this exam, you’ll complete the multiple-choice and written free-response sections on paper, and you’ll record your spoken free response on a device supplied by the testing school.

AP French Language and Culture Exam

This is the regularly scheduled date for the AP French Language and Culture Exam.

Tue, May 12, 20268 AM Local3hrs

Exam Components

Section IA: Multiple Choice

30 questions 23% of Score

This section presents 4 sets of authentic print sources (announcements/advertisements, literary texts, articles and charts, letters) with questions. The questions will ask you to:

  • Identify the main ideas and supporting details
  • Determine the meaning of vocabulary words in context
  • Identify the author’s point of view or the target audience
  • Demonstrate knowledge of the cultural or interdisciplinary information contained in the text

Section IB: Multiple Choice with Audio

35 questions 27% of Score

This section includes a variety of authentic audio sources, including conversations, audio reports, interviews, instructions, and presentations. It is divided into 2 subsections:

  • The first includes 2 sets of audio sources that are paired with print materials on the same topic with questions (articles and audio reports, charts and conversations)
  • The second includes 3 sets of audio sources with questions (interviews, instructions, presentations)

You will respond to questions about main ideas and supporting details. Some questions will require you to show understanding of cultural or interdisciplinary information.

You will have time to read a preview of each selection and skim the questions before listening to the audio. All audio texts will be played twice.

You are encouraged to take notes during this part of the exam and are given writing space for that purpose. Your notes will not be graded.

Section IIA: Free Response Written

2 questions 25% of Score

There are two writing tasks in this section:

  • Interpersonal Writing: Read and reply to an email message (15 minutes).
  • Presentational Writing: Write an argumentative essay based on 3 sources, including an article, a table, chart, graph, or infographic, and a related audio source (played twice), that present different viewpoints on a topic (~55 minutes total: 15 minutes to review materials plus 40 minutes to write). You will have access to the print sources and any notes you may take on the audio during the entire 40-minute writing period.

Section IIB: Free Response Spoken

2 questions 25% of Score

There are two speaking tasks in this section:

  • Interpersonal Speaking: Participate in 5 exchanges in a simulated conversation (20 seconds for each response). For this conversation, you will be provided with a preview of the conversation, including an outline of each exchange.
  • Presentational Speaking: Deliver a 2-minute presentation in response to a prompt in which you compare a cultural feature of a French-speaking community with which you are familiar to your own community or another community.

Skills You'll Learn

  • Understanding French when you hear it and read it

  • Holding conversations in real-life situations

  • Writing stories, letters, emails, essays, and other texts

Units

Unit 1 – Families in French–Speaking Countries

You’ll learn French language skills in the context of studying family life and values in French-speaking societies and explore contemporary beliefs and challenges that families face.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Interpreting promotional materials
  • Understanding the elements of a formal letter
  • Describing data from a table, chart, graph, map, or infographic
  • Participating in an informal conversation
  • Crafting an email reply
  • Giving a presentation related to family and society

Unit 2 – Language and Culture in French–Speaking Countries

You'll build your vocabulary and learn about how language and culture shape and reflect evolving ideas about identity in French-speaking societies.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Identifying the main idea and summarizing short stories
  • Interpreting audio recordings and interviews
  • Comprehending articles and charts
  • Drawing connections between texts and their larger cultural context
  • Justifying ideas and opinions in writing
  • Giving a presentation comparing French cultural concepts to familiar ones

Unit 3 – Beauty and Art in French–Speaking Countries

You'll explore how ideas of beauty and art influence and reflect culture in French-speaking communities.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Reading articles about art and exploring museum websites
  • Interpreting classic texts
  • Understanding what is included in the format of typical letters and interpreting their meaning
  • Practicing conversational skills
  • Analyzing graphs, tables, and infographics
  • Replying to emails
  • Giving a presentation on art and French-speaking culture

Unit 4 – Science and Technology in French–Speaking Countries

You’ll examine how developments in science and technology affect daily life in French-speaking communities and use your growing language skills to help you interpret unfamiliar words and engage in more complicated texts.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Interpreting charts, tables, and infographics in context
  • Reading articles about technological advances
  • Understanding interviews
  • Following written and verbal instructions
  • Comprehending oral presentations
  • Writing essays and citing sources
  • Giving a presentation on the impacts of scientific and technological developments

Unit 5 – Quality of Life in Francophone Countries

You'll learn more about contemporary life in French-speaking communities and how social status, cultural perspectives, and access to jobs and resources can make an impact on the quality of life.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Connecting literary texts to larger cultural topics
  • Interpreting data and articles
  • Identifying perspective, tone, and attitude in a conversation
  • Interpreting audio and video recordings
  • Understanding and following recipes and instructions
  • Crafting an email reply using idioms and expressions
  • Participating in conversations and giving advice
  • Giving a presentation comparing cultures and daily life

Unit 6 – Challenges in French–Speaking Countries

You'll explore how complex global issues affect people’s lives in French-speaking communities and engage in deeper discussions to suggest possible solutions.

Skills you will practice may include:

  • Analyzing articles, charts, and infographics on environmental changes
  • Listening for connections and meaning in audio reports
  • Making cultural connections among presentations
  • Writing essays to address global issues and suggest solutions
  • Giving a presentation on global challenges
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