Start with format and rubricBefore practicing any timed writing, read through the topic guides for each FRQ and the MCQ section. Understand exactly what each rubric row rewards and what the most common wrong-answer patterns look like. Knowing the target makes practice more efficient.
Practice close reading on unfamiliar passagesFind poems and prose fiction passages you have not read before and practice identifying how specific choices create meaning. For each passage, write one sentence explaining a technique, its effect, and its significance. This is the core move for both MCQ and FRQ.
Write timed thesis statements before full essaysBefore writing full 40-minute essays, practice writing only the thesis for a range of prompts. Score each one against Row A criteria. Once you can consistently produce a defensible, specific claim in under 5 minutes, move to writing full essays with timed conditions.
Build your Q3 argument bankFor each of your 2 to 3 prepared works, write out 5 to 6 specific moments (scenes, passages, structural choices) you could use as evidence. Practice connecting each moment to a range of abstract concepts so you can adapt quickly to whatever Q3 prompt appears.
Use the score calculator to estimate your targetAfter any timed practice session, use the AP Lit score calculator on Fiveable to estimate where your MCQ and FRQ performance would land on the 1 to 5 scale. Identify which section is holding your score down and focus your next session there.