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Choose a pre-built study schedule that fits your timeline. Each plan covers key psychology units with lessons, term drills, and practice exams.
Rapid review of the most-tested AP Psychology topics — biological bases, cognition, development, and abnormal psychology.
Covers all 9 units of the AP Psychology curriculum with a balanced mix of content review, vocabulary drills, and practice exams.
Thorough coverage of every AP Psychology unit with vocabulary mastery, key theorist reviews, multiple practice exams, and FRQ writing practice.
Plans are added to your dashboard Study Planner where you can track progress, check off tasks, and adjust the schedule.
These study plans break exam prep into a day-by-day schedule, with options sized for different timelines — from a full runway down to a final-weeks push. Whichever plan you pick is added to your dashboard planner, where you can check off tasks and adjust the pace as you go. Choose the one that matches the time you actually have.
AP Psychology introduces the scientific study of behavior and mental processes, and the course was redesigned beginning with the 2025 exam. The content is now organized into five units: biological bases of behavior; cognition; development and learning; social psychology and personality; and mental and physical health. Students study core psychological theories, research methods and ethics, the biological underpinnings of behavior, sensation and perception, learning, memory, motivation, emotion, developmental stages, personality, psychological disorders and their treatment, and social influences on behavior. A defining feature of the redesigned exam is its stronger emphasis on scientific inquiry and evidence-based reasoning. The two free-response questions are no longer the older application-prompt style; instead, the Article Analysis Question (AAQ) asks students to read a summary of a research study and analyze its design, identify variables, evaluate ethics, and assess the validity of conclusions, while the Evidence-Based Question (EBQ) presents multiple sources and asks students to construct and defend a claim using cited evidence. This shift means students must understand research methodology, operational definitions, independent and dependent variables, sampling, and statistical reasoning deeply, not just vocabulary. The multiple-choice section also moved from five answer choices to four. Students who treat the course as pure terminology memorization often struggle with the new FRQs, which reward the ability to apply concepts to real studies and arguments. The most effective preparation combines mastering the vocabulary of each unit with extensive practice on AAQ and EBQ prompts, paying close attention to how each rubric awards points for methodology analysis and evidence-based claims. The exam is fully digital in Bluebook.
Section I has 75 multiple-choice questions (90 min, about 66.7%); Section II has 2 free-response questions (70 min, about 33.3%): one Article Analysis Question (AAQ) and one Evidence-Based Question (EBQ). Total time is 2 hours 40 minutes, fully digital in Bluebook.
Multiple choice contributes about two-thirds and the two FRQs about one-third of a weighted composite that converts to the AP 1-5 scale.