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AP Psychology
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AP Psychology Exam Info

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The AP Psychology Exam will test your understanding of the psychological concepts covered in the course units, as well as your ability to analyze behavioral studies.

This is a fully digital exam. You’ll complete multiple-choice and free-response questions in the Bluebook testing app, with all responses automatically submitted at the end of the exam.

AP Psychology Exam

This is the regularly scheduled date for the AP Psychology Exam.

Tue, May 12, 202612 PM Local2hrs 40mins

Exam Components

Section I: Multiple Choice

75 questions 1hr 30mins 67% of Score

You’ll be asked to:  

  • Apply psychological perspectives, theories, concepts, and research findings.
  • Evaluate qualitative and quantitative research methods and study designs.
  • Evaluate representations of psychological concepts depicted in quantitative research (tables, graphs, charts, and diagrams) and described in qualitative research. 

Section II: Free Response

2 questions 1hr 10mins 33% of Score

In the free-response section, you’ll respond to two questions with written answers. The first question will be the Article Analysis Question (AAQ), and the second question will be the Evidence-Based Question (EBQ).  

You’ll be asked to:  

  • Apply psychological perspectives, theories, concepts, and research findings.
  • Evaluate qualitative and quantitative research methods and study designs.
  • Evaluate representations of psychological concepts depicted in quantitative research (tables, graphs, charts, and diagrams) and described in qualitative research.
  • Develop and justify psychological arguments using evidence.

Skills You'll Learn

  • Connecting psychological concepts and theories to real-life scenarios

  • Understanding and interpreting data

  • Analyzing research studies in psychology

Units

Unit 1: Biological Bases of Behavior

You’ll study behaviors and mental processes from a biological perspective and explore the effects of the interaction between human biology and our environment.

Topics may include:  

  • The interaction of inherited traits, environment, and evolution in shaping behavior 
  • Structures and functions of nervous systems
  • Neural firing and the influence of psychoactive substances 
  • The study of the brain, including its structures and functions 
  • Sleep
  • Sensation 

On The Exam

15%–25% of exam score

Unit 2: Cognition

You’ll examine the complex nature of how memory, intelligence, and other mental processes impact human behavior.

Topics may include:  

  • Perception
  • Biases and errors in thinking, creative thinking, and problem-solving strategies 
  • The cognitive and physiological processes that make up memory 
  • Forgetting and typical memory errors 
  • Defining and measuring intelligence and achievement 

On The Exam

15%–25% of exam score

Unit 3: Development and Learning

You’ll study how physical and social changes over humans’ lifespans can influence behavior and mental processes from a variety of perspectives and how learning works.

Topics may include:  

  • Research methods used in developmental psychology
  • Physical, cognitive, and social-emotional development across the lifespan 
  • Gender and sexual orientation

On The Exam

15%–25% of exam score

Unit 4: Social Psychology and Personality

You’ll study how the social experience influences behavior of individuals and groups and how personality is studied and develops.

Topics may include:  

  • Attribution theory and person perception
  • Attitude formation and change
  • The psychology of social situations
  • Psychodynamic, humanistic, social cognitive, and trait theories of personality
  • Motivation
  • Emotion 

On The Exam

15%–25% of exam score

Unit 5: Mental and Physical Health

You’ll learn how psychologists promote mental and physical health and evaluate, study, and treat a range of psychological disorders.

Topics may include:  

  • An introduction to health and positive psychology
  • Standards for diagnosing and approaches to explaining psychological disorders 
  • Neurodevelopmental and schizophrenic spectrum disorders 
  • Bipolar, depressive, anxiety, and obsessive-compulsive disorders 
  • Dissociative and trauma- and stress-related disorders 
  • Eating disorders and personality disorders 
  • Historical developments in psychological treatment 
  • Modern treatment options and methods 

On The Exam

15%–25% of exam score

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