Start with the exam format, not content reviewBefore reviewing any physics content, read the topic guides for each FRQ type so you know exactly what each question asks you to do. Students who learn the task structure first can target their content review more efficiently.
Review high-weight MCQ topics firstForces, energy, and momentum are the most heavily weighted topics in Section I. If your study time is limited, prioritize these before reviewing fluids, oscillations, or rotational dynamics.
Practice each FRQ type separately before mixing themWork through FRQ 1, 2, 3, and 4 as isolated practice sessions before attempting a full timed Section II. Each type has a different task structure, and mixing them too early makes it harder to internalize the rubric expectations for each.
Score your own FRQ responses with rubric criteriaAfter each FRQ attempt, check whether you earned the diagram point, the symbolic expression point, the numerical answer point with units, and the justification point. Self-scoring against specific criteria is more useful than just checking if your final answer was right.
Use the score calculator in the final weekRun your recent practice performance through the Fiveable AP Physics 1 score calculator to estimate your composite score. Use the result to decide whether to focus remaining time on MCQ pacing, FRQ justification writing, or a specific content area.