Topics with the highest MCQ miss rate
19,605 MCQsMiss rate is based on high-volume AP Art History multiple-choice practice.
AP Art History covers 10 units, from Global Prehistoric Art, 30,000–500 BCE to Global Contemporary Art, 1980 CE to Present. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, FRQs, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, practice exams, and exam prep.
AP Art History is a college-level survey of art and architecture from global prehistory to today. You build visual analysis, contextual reasoning, comparison, and evidence-based writing across 250 required works.
Get the big picture: what AP Art History covers, how it is scored, and how the units connect.
read the overviewAnswer a quick mix of questions to see which units need the most review.
start a diagnosticOpen the unit you are studying now and review its guides, practice, and key terms.
browse all 10 unitsAP Art History covers 10 units, from Global Prehistoric Art, 30,000–500 BCE to Global Contemporary Art, 1980 CE to Present. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, FRQs, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, practice exams, and exam prep.
Use this section breakdown to plan timed practice and decide which question types need review.
| Section | Questions | Time | % of Score |
|---|---|---|---|
| Section I – Multiple Choice | 80 | 60 min | 50% |
| Section II – Free Response | 6 | 120 min | 50% |
Total timed testing time: 180 minutes.
The course is organized into 10 units. The percentages below are the College Board exam weights, so you can see which units carry the most multiple-choice points. Open each unit for its study guide, topic pages, key terms, and practice questions.
AP Art History Unit 1, Global Prehistory, covers art made between 30,000 and 500 BCE, before writing existed anywhere on Earth.
AP Art History Unit 2 covers the art of the ancient Near East, dynastic Egypt, Greece, Etruria, and Rome, spanning roughly 3500 BCE to 300 CE.
AP Art History Unit 3 covers Early European and Colonial American art from 200 to 1750 CE, the largest stretch of the course, running from Early Christian catacombs through Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque traditions and into the hybrid art of the Spanish viceroyalties.
AP Art History Unit 4 covers the art of Europe and the Americas from 1750 to 1980, the era when art changed faster than at any point in history.
AP Art History Unit 5 covers the art of the Indigenous Americas from 1000 BCE to 1980 CE, spanning three regions that developed independently of Europe, Asia, and Africa: Mesoamerica, the Central Andes, and Native North America.
AP Art History Unit 6 covers African art from 1100 to 1980 CE, spanning hundreds of distinct cultures from the Asante kingdom of Ghana to the Kuba court of Central Africa.
AP Art History Unit 7 covers the art of West and Central Asia from 500 BCE to 1980 CE, a region that sat at the crossroads of the ancient Silk Route and absorbed Greek, Persian, Indian, and Chinese influences.
AP Art History Unit 8 covers the art of South, East, and Southeast Asia from 300 BCE to 1980 CE, and its single biggest idea is that religion traveled along trade routes and remade art everywhere it went.
AP Art History Unit 9 covers the art of the Pacific from 700 to 1980 CE, spanning the thousands of islands grouped as Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, plus Australia and Aotearoa (New Zealand).
AP Art History Unit 10 covers global contemporary art from 1980 to the present, the moment when the art world stopped being a Euro-American story and became genuinely worldwide.
These trends come from real Fiveable practice data, so you can see what students are reviewing, which topics need extra attention, and how written practice can improve over time.
Miss rate is based on high-volume AP Art History multiple-choice practice.
Average MCQ accuracy by student practice volume across 480 AP Art History students.
Among AP Art History FRQ responses that students retried on Fiveable, average scores rose from 69% on the first attempt to 74% on the latest attempt.
practice AP Art History FRQs →These guides collect important exam skills, big ideas, essay tasks, and other subject-specific resources.
Skim the 10 unit pages, then choose the units that need the most review. Use topic guides for the concepts that feel fuzzy instead of rereading the whole course.
After each unit, answer practice questions and write free responses when they are part of the subject. Keep a short list of missed skills and revisit those guides before the next set.
Use exam guides, cheatsheets, score calculators, and practice exams when they are available for this course. The best final review plan connects content, question types, and timing.
Use the question types below to plan written-response practice and connect exam guides to timed FRQs. Open an example prompt to practice that question type right away.
| Question | Focus | Points | % of Score | Example prompt |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRQ 1 | Comparison (Long Essay) | 8 | 12% | Animal and zoomorphic forms in art |
| FRQ 2 | Visual/Contextual Analysis (Long Essay) | 6 | 9% | Prehistoric art's ritual and sacred functions |
| FRQ 3 | Visual Analysis (Short Essay) | 5 | 7% | — |
| FRQ 4 | Contextual Analysis (Short Essay) | 5 | 7% | Ancient Iranian pottery with geometric animal decoration |
| FRQ 5 | Attribution (Short Essay) | 5 | 7% | — |
| FRQ 6 | Continuity and Change (Short Essay) | 5 | 7% | — |
AP Art History is moderately challenging. The workload comes from learning 250 required works across 10 units, plus writing timed visual and contextual analysis essays. If you enjoy looking at art and connecting it to culture and history, the content stays engaging. The biggest difficulty is the volume, so steady weekly review beats last-minute cramming every time.
Start with the units in order, beginning with Global Prehistory and the Ancient Mediterranean, and learn each required work by title, artist or culture, date, and materials. Pair every image with its cultural context. Write one short analysis paragraph each week so the essay format feels familiar. Use Fiveable unit guides, key terms, and practice questions to review consistently.
Units 3 and 4 carry the most weight on the multiple-choice section at roughly 21 percent each, covering Early Europe and Colonial Americas and Later Europe and Americas. Unit 2, Ancient Mediterranean, follows at about 15 percent, and Unit 10, Global Contemporary, at around 11 percent. Smaller units like Global Prehistory, the Pacific, and West and Central Asia still appear, so do not skip them.
There are 6 free-response questions worth 50 percent of your score. Questions 1 and 2 are long essays: a comparison worth 8 points and a visual or contextual analysis worth 6 points. Questions 3 through 6 are short essays worth 5 points each, covering visual analysis, contextual analysis, attribution, and continuity and change. You get 120 recommended minutes total.
Strong visual analysis describes specific elements you can see, like form, line, scale, materials, and composition, then explains how those choices shape meaning. Do not just label the work. Connect what you observe to function, audience, and cultural context, and support every claim with concrete evidence. Practice attributing unknown works using stylistic clues, since that skill appears in both sections.