AP Statistics
4 min read•july 11, 2024
Harrison Burnside
Harrison Burnside
Welcome to the most awesome AP Class EVER (or as most people just call it, AP Statistics). Let's go on a deep dive into the AP Statistics exam and take a look at how the exam is formatted and scored 💯
The second and final section on the exam is the free-response questions. The Stats exam has two parts to the FRQ section. Courtesy of the College Board Website, the free-response question will include:
The sixth question, the investigative task, is a separate part of the FRQ and is worth 25% of this section's weight. Free-response questions, like the MCQs, are worth 50% of your total exam score, with the first five questions being worth 37.5% and the last investigative task being worth 12.5% overall!
Free-response questions, similar to the MCQ, also allow the use of a calculator, and the same rules apply as before regarding what types of calculators you will be allowed to use. Check out the MCQ Help for AP Stats Article to learn more <
For the Section Two, the FRQ portion of your exam, you will receive:
There are nine units in AP Statistics that the AP Exam tests 🎉 You can reference this table to see which units you should study the most and least:
Unit | Weight |
Unit 1: Exploring One-Variable Data | 15-23% |
Unit 2: Exploring Two-Variable Data | 5-7% |
Unit 3: Collecting Data | 12-15% |
Unit 4: Probability, Random Variables, and Probability Distributions | 10-20% |
Unit 5: Sampling Distributions | 7-12% |
Unit 6: Inference for Categorical Data: Proportions | 12-15% |
Unit 7: Inference for Quantitative Data: Means | 10-18% |
Unit 8: Inference for Categorical Data: Chi-Square | 2-5% |
Unit 9: Inference for Quantitative Data: Slopes | 2-5% |
AP Statistics 📊 is a bit of an interesting class because the FRQs follow a unique rubric that isn't anything like the rubrics of other AP exams. Make sure that you understand how points are earned and lost on the exam!
Just like as shown in the image above, each question part will be based on ratings: essentially correct, partially correct, and incorrect. Depending on your EPIs, each question will receive a score from one to four.
📝 Read: AP Stats - Statistics Free Response Questions
AP Statistics is a pretty hard class and if you are considering taking it or self-studying, make sure to check out the articles:
📝 Read: AP Stats - Is AP Stats Hard? Is AP Stats Worth It? (coming soon)
📝 Read: AP Stats - Self-Study and Homeschool
However, if you continue to study 📓 with Fiveable, you can make the AP Stats FRQ section completely Fiveable (see what we did there)! So, make sure to take a look at all of our AP Stats Resources at Fiveable to do amazing on your exam 🎉