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AP Psychology Science Practices & Exam Questions Review

AP Psychology is not a memorization test. The exam rewards students who can apply psychological concepts, evaluate research, interpret data, and build evidence-based arguments.

Use these topic guides to understand exactly what each science practice demands and how the AAQ and EBQ free-response questions are scored.

What is science practices & exam questions?

The four science practices are the backbone of how AP Psychology is assessed. Rather than asking you to recall isolated facts, the exam presents novel scenarios, research summaries, and data sets and asks you to think like a psychologist. The two free-response questions each target a specific cluster of these practices in a structured, multi-part format.

Science Practice 1 (Concept Application) drives the majority of MCQs. Science Practices 2, 3, and 4 are central to both free-response questions. The AAQ tests your ability to analyze a single study across six dimensions. The EBQ tests your ability to synthesize three sources into a coherent, evidence-backed argument.

What the MCQ section demands

About 65% of multiple-choice questions assess Science Practice 1. You will read a scenario describing a person's behavior or mental process and identify which concept, theory, or perspective best explains it. Recall alone is not enough; you must apply the concept accurately to an unfamiliar situation.

What the AAQ demands

The Article Analysis Question gives you a study summary and 25 minutes (including a 10-minute reading period). You analyze the study across six parts: research method, measurement, data interpretation, ethics, generalizability, and connection to the original hypothesis. Each part targets a specific science practice.

What the EBQ demands

The Evidence-Based Question gives you three peer-reviewed source summaries and 45 minutes (including a 15-minute reading period). You develop a claim, select evidence from the sources, apply psychological concepts to explain that evidence, and use multiple psychological perspectives to support your argument.

Think like a psychologist, not a test-taker

Every science practice on the AP exam mirrors what working psychologists actually do: apply frameworks to behavior, design and critique studies, read data critically, and argue from evidence. Students who understand why each practice matters, not just what it is called, perform better on both the MCQ and free-response sections.

Thematic study guides

1

Concept Application

The highest-weighted skill on the exam. You apply psychological perspectives, theories, and research findings to novel real-world scenarios. Drives roughly 65% of MCQs and appears in both free-response questions.

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2

Research Methods and Design

You evaluate how studies are designed, identify variables, assess ethical standards, and distinguish between experimental, correlational, and descriptive approaches. Central to AAQ Parts A, B, and D.

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3

Data Interpretation

You read graphs, tables, and statistical findings and draw accurate conclusions. Tested directly in AAQ Part C and in MCQs that present data from hypothetical studies.

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4

Argumentation

You construct evidence-based arguments using psychological science. The EBQ is the primary test of this skill, requiring a defensible claim, source evidence, concept application, and perspective-based reasoning.

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5

Article Analysis Question

A six-part FRQ built around one study summary. Tests all four science practices across method identification, measurement, data interpretation, ethics, generalizability, and hypothesis evaluation. 25 minutes total.

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6

Evidence-Based Question

A multi-part FRQ built around three source summaries. Tests Science Practices 1 and 4 most heavily. Requires a claim, evidence from sources, concept application, and perspective-based reasoning. 45 minutes total.

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Science practices & exam questions review notes

Science Practice 1

Concept Application

Science Practice 1 asks you to take a psychological concept, theory, or research finding and use it to explain or predict behavior in a specific scenario. The scenario will be new to you; the concept will not. Your job is to connect the two accurately.

  • Psychological perspective: A lens for explaining behavior, such as biological, cognitive, behavioral, sociocultural, or psychodynamic. MCQs often ask which perspective best explains a described behavior.
  • Concept application: Using a defined psychological term or theory to analyze a real-world situation rather than simply defining the term in isolation.
  • Novel scenario: A situation you have not seen before in class. The exam deliberately uses unfamiliar contexts to test whether you understand a concept deeply enough to transfer it.
Can you read a two-sentence scenario and identify the correct psychological concept without being given answer choices first? Practice naming the concept before looking at options.
Task typeWhat it looks likeCommon error
MCQ scenarioA character behaves in a way that illustrates one conceptChoosing a related but imprecise concept
FRQ applicationExplaining a behavior using a named concept with reasoningDefining the concept without connecting it to the scenario
Science Practice 2

Research Methods and Design

Science Practice 2 covers how psychological research is designed, conducted, and evaluated. You need to distinguish between research methodologies, identify their strengths and limitations, and recognize whether a study follows ethical guidelines.

  • Experimental design: A study in which the researcher manipulates an independent variable and measures its effect on a dependent variable, allowing causal conclusions.
  • Correlational design: A study that measures the relationship between two variables without manipulation; cannot establish causation.
  • Within-subjects design: A research design in which each participant is observed in every condition of the study, allowing direct comparison of a participant to themselves across conditions.
  • Confederate: A research assistant instructed to behave in a particular way as part of an experimental design, often to create a realistic scenario for participants.
  • Ethical guidelines: Standards such as informed consent, debriefing, confidentiality, and the right to withdraw that protect research participants.
Given a study description, can you identify the independent variable, dependent variable, and control group? Can you explain one ethical concern the study raises?
Design typeCan show causation?Key strengthKey limitation
ExperimentYesControls for confounding variablesMay lack ecological validity
Correlational studyNoStudies variables that cannot be manipulatedCannot rule out third variables
Case studyNoRich, detailed data on one individualLow generalizability
SurveyNoLarge samples, efficient data collectionSelf-report bias
Science Practice 3

Data Interpretation

Science Practice 3 asks you to read numerical findings, statistical results, and visual data representations and draw accurate conclusions from them. On the AAQ, this means interpreting the study's results and explaining what they mean for the research question.

  • Statistical significance: A finding is statistically significant when the probability that the result occurred by chance is low enough (typically p < 0.05) to support the hypothesis.
  • Descriptive statistics: Numbers that summarize data, including measures of central tendency (mean, median, mode) and variability (range, standard deviation).
  • Correlation coefficient: A number between -1 and +1 indicating the strength and direction of a relationship between two variables.
  • Confounding variable: An uncontrolled variable that may explain the relationship between the independent and dependent variables, threatening internal validity.
If a study reports a correlation of r = -0.72, can you explain what that means in plain language and identify one limitation of interpreting it as causal?
Data typeWhat to look forCommon misreading
Bar graphDifferences in group meansAssuming any difference is meaningful without checking significance
Scatter plotDirection and strength of correlationAssuming correlation means causation
Table of meansWhich group scored higher and by how muchIgnoring variability within groups
Science Practice 4

Argumentation

Science Practice 4 asks you to construct a logical, evidence-based argument about human behavior. This practice is central to the EBQ, where you must develop a claim, support it with evidence from provided sources, and use psychological perspectives to strengthen your reasoning.

  • Defensible claim: A clear, specific statement about behavior or mental processes that can be supported with psychological evidence.
  • Evidence integration: Selecting relevant findings from research sources and explaining how they support your claim, not just quoting them.
  • Psychological perspective: A theoretical lens (biological, cognitive, behavioral, sociocultural, psychodynamic, humanistic) used to explain why evidence supports a claim.
  • Counterargument: An opposing claim or limitation that a strong argument acknowledges and addresses to demonstrate nuanced reasoning.
Write a one-sentence claim about a psychological topic, then identify which of the three EBQ sources would best support it and explain why in two sentences.
Argumentation elementStrong responseWeak response
ClaimSpecific, testable, directly addresses the promptVague restatement of the prompt
EvidenceCites specific findings from a named sourceParaphrases the source without connecting to the claim
Perspective applicationNames a perspective and explains the mechanismNames a perspective without explaining how it supports the claim
AAQ

Article Analysis Question

The AAQ is a six-part free-response question built around a single study summary. Each part targets a specific analytical skill. You have 25 minutes total, including a 10-minute reading period. Spending the reading period annotating the study for method, variables, data, and ethics will save time during writing.

  • Part A: Research method: Identify and justify the research design used in the study.
  • Part B: Measurement: Explain how a key variable in the study was operationally defined and measured.
  • Part C: Data interpretation: Describe what the data show and what conclusion can be drawn from the results.
  • Part D: Ethics: Identify an ethical concern raised by the study and explain why it matters.
  • Part E: Generalizability: Evaluate the extent to which the findings can be applied to a broader population.
  • Part F: Hypothesis connection: Explain whether the results support or challenge the original research hypothesis.
After reading a study summary, can you write one sentence for each of the six AAQ parts before you start drafting full responses?
AAQ PartScience PracticeKey question to answer
A: Research methodSP2What design was used and why does it fit the research goal?
B: MeasurementSP2How was the key variable defined and measured?
C: Data interpretationSP3What do the results show?
D: EthicsSP2What ethical standard is at risk and why does it matter?
E: GeneralizabilitySP4Who can and cannot these findings be applied to?
EBQ

Evidence-Based Question

The EBQ is a multi-part free-response question that gives you three source summaries on a shared topic. You have 45 minutes total, including a 15-minute reading period. Your response must include a claim, evidence from the sources, concept application, and perspective-based reasoning.

  • Source synthesis: Drawing on multiple sources to build a single coherent argument rather than summarizing each source separately.
  • Claim development: Stating a clear position that the rest of your response will support with evidence and reasoning.
  • Concept application in EBQ: Naming a specific psychological concept and explaining how it accounts for the evidence you selected from the sources.
  • Perspective-based reasoning: Using a named psychological perspective to explain why the evidence supports your claim, going beyond surface-level description.
  • generalizability: The extent to which research findings from a sample can be applied to or are representative of a larger population.
Practice writing an EBQ claim in one sentence, then selecting one piece of evidence from each of three hypothetical sources and explaining how each piece supports the claim.
EBQ componentWhat earns pointsWhat loses points
ClaimClear, specific, arguable positionRestating the prompt or describing rather than arguing
Evidence selectionSpecific finding from a named source tied to the claimQuoting without explaining relevance
Concept applicationNamed concept with a mechanistic explanationListing a concept without applying it
Perspective reasoningNamed perspective with explanation of how it supports the claimNaming a perspective without connecting it to evidence

Key terms

TermDefinition
ConfederateA research assistant who is instructed to behave in a particular way as part of an experimental design, often to create a realistic scenario for participants.
generalizabilityThe extent to which research findings from a sample can be applied to or are representative of a larger population.
within-subjects designA research design in which each participant is observed in every condition of the study, allowing direct comparison of a participant to themselves across conditions.

Common mistakes

Defining instead of applying on MCQs

The most common MCQ error is selecting the answer that correctly defines a concept rather than the one that correctly applies it to the scenario. Always ask: which answer explains this specific situation?

Confusing correlation with causation in data questions

When a study reports a correlation, students often write that one variable caused the other. Correlation only shows a relationship. Causation requires an experiment with a manipulated independent variable.

Listing perspectives without explaining mechanisms on the EBQ

Naming a perspective (biological, cognitive, etc.) earns no points unless you explain how that perspective accounts for the evidence. The mechanism is the point.

Skipping the reading period on FRQs

Students who start writing immediately on the AAQ or EBQ often miss key details in the source material. Use the full reading period to annotate before writing a single sentence of your response.

Treating generalizability as a yes or no question

Strong AAQ responses on Part E explain who the findings do and do not apply to and why, based on the sample characteristics. A one-word answer will not earn full credit.

How this theme shows up on the AP exam

How science practices appear on the MCQ section

About 65% of MCQs test Science Practice 1. You will read a scenario and select the concept, theory, or perspective that best explains the described behavior. A smaller portion of MCQs present data from a hypothetical study and ask you to interpret results or identify a methodological feature, testing Science Practices 2 and 3.

How the AAQ is scored

Each of the six AAQ parts is scored independently. You can earn points on Parts C, D, and E even if your Part A answer is wrong. Read each part prompt carefully and answer only what it asks. Vague or overly general responses, especially on generalizability and ethics, are the most common source of lost points.

How the EBQ is scored

The EBQ awards points for a defensible claim, evidence tied to that claim from the provided sources, accurate concept application, and perspective-based reasoning. Each element is evaluated separately. A strong claim that is never supported by evidence, or evidence that is never connected to a concept, will not earn full credit.

Review checklist

  • Apply concepts to scenarios, not just define themFor every major concept you review, write one sentence applying it to a made-up scenario. If you can only define it, you are not ready for the MCQ section.
  • Know the strengths and limitations of each research designBe able to explain why an experiment can show causation but a correlational study cannot, and identify at least one ethical concern for any study design.
  • Practice reading data before drawing conclusionsWhen you see a graph or table, state what the data show in one sentence before interpreting what they mean. Separating description from interpretation prevents overreach.
  • Understand the six parts of the AAQ and which science practice each targetsUse the comparison table in the AAQ review note to map each part to its skill. During the 10-minute reading period, annotate the study for each part before writing.
  • Write a practice EBQ claim and test it against all three sourcesA strong EBQ claim is one that all three sources can speak to. If one source is irrelevant to your claim, revise the claim before writing your full response.
  • Know what generalizability means and how to evaluate itFor any study, identify the sample and ask who is not represented. AAQ Part E asks you to evaluate generalizability, so practice spotting sample limitations in study descriptions.
  • Use the score calculator to set a realistic targetThe AP score calculator available on this page can help you estimate how your MCQ and FRQ performance combine into a final score, so you know where to focus your remaining review time.

How to study science practices & exam questions

Start with Science Practice 1 since it drives most MCQsRead the Concept Application topic guide and practice applying five to ten major concepts to original scenarios you write yourself. This is the highest-return activity for the multiple-choice section.
Build a research methods reference sheetUse the Research Methods and Design topic guide to create a table comparing experimental, correlational, case study, survey, and naturalistic observation designs across purpose, causation, and key limitations.
Practice data interpretation with real study descriptionsFind the Data Interpretation topic guide and work through any examples of graphs and tables. For each one, write a description sentence and a conclusion sentence separately before checking your reasoning.
Simulate the AAQ with a timed practice runRead the AAQ topic guide, then find a study description and write responses to all six parts in 25 minutes. Review your responses against the six-part framework to identify which parts need more work.
Simulate the EBQ with a timed practice runRead the EBQ topic guide, then write a claim and full response using three source summaries in 45 minutes. Check that your claim, evidence, concept application, and perspective reasoning each earn their points independently.

More ways to review

Topic study guides

Open the individual guides for Science Practices & Exam Questions when you want a closer review of one topic.

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FRQ practice

Practice free-response reasoning and compare your answer with scoring guidance.

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Cram archive videos

Watch past review streams filtered to Science Practices & Exam Questions when you want a video walkthrough.

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Cheatsheets

Use unit cheatsheets for a quick visual review after you work through the notes.

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Score calculator

Estimate your broader AP score goal after you review the course and exam format.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What's on the AP Psych Unit 0 progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The AP Psychology exam tests science practices throughout every unit, and the Unit 0 progress check in AP Classroom reflects that by pulling MCQ and FRQ items directly from topics like research methods, experimental design, statistical reasoning, and ethical guidelines. The MCQ portion tests your ability to identify variables, interpret data, and evaluate study designs. The FRQ portion asks you to apply those same skills, often by analyzing a described study or explaining why a researcher made a specific methodological choice. Practicing with these question types early builds the analytical habits that carry through every other unit. Head to /ap-psych-revised/unit-0 for matched practice aligned to these exact progress check topics.

How do I practice AP Psych Unit 0 FRQs?

AP Psych FRQs in Unit 0 almost always center on research methods, so the best practice is working through prompts that ask you to design a study, identify an operational definition, or explain how a confounding variable could affect results. These question types show up on the ap psych exam in two main formats: ones that give you a scenario and ask you to evaluate it, and ones that ask you to propose a study from scratch. To practice, read a prompt carefully, outline each part before writing, and check that every claim connects back to a specific concept like random assignment or sampling bias. You can find practice FRQ prompts and scoring guidance at /ap-psych-revised/unit-0.

Where can I find AP Psych Unit 0 practice questions?

For AP Psych Unit 0 practice questions, including MCQ and practice test sets, /ap-psych-revised/unit-0 is the place to start. That page collects multiple-choice questions covering research methods, experimental vs. correlational design, measures of central tendency, and ethical standards in psychology research. Working through a full MCQ set before your ap psych exam helps you spot the specific vocabulary College Board uses, like distinguishing a positive correlation from causation or recognizing a double-blind procedure. If you want a rough sense of where you stand, an ap psych score calculator can help you convert practice scores into a projected 1-5 scale after you finish a timed set.

How should I study AP Psych Unit 0?

Start by getting comfortable with the core vocabulary: independent variable, dependent variable, random sampling, correlation coefficient, and the major ethical principles like informed consent and debriefing. These terms appear constantly on the ap psychology exam, so knowing them cold saves time on every other unit. From there, practice applying concepts to new scenarios rather than just memorizing definitions. Try reading a short study description and naming the research method, identifying potential confounds, and interpreting a basic statistic like a mean or standard deviation. Spacing out short review sessions over several days works better than one long cram. Visit /ap-psych-revised/unit-0 for structured notes and practice sets that follow this exact progression.

Ready to review Science Practices & Exam Questions?Start with the notes, check the topic cards, and use the practice or resource links when they are available for this course.