AP Research challenges students to dive deep into a topic they're passionate about. It's a year-long journey of exploration, analysis, and discovery that builds on skills from AP Seminar. Students develop a research question, conduct investigations, and present findings in a 4000-5000 word paper. The course culminates in a presentation and oral defense, pushing students to articulate and defend their work.
No. AP Research has no sit-down exam. Your entire AP score comes from two through-course assessments: a 4,000-5,000 word academic paper and a 20-minute presentation with an oral defense. Both are submitted and scored by College Board readers, not your teacher.
AP Research scores are based entirely on your academic paper and your presentation with oral defense. Readers evaluate the quality of your research question, methodology, analysis, and how well you communicate and defend your findings. There is no multiple-choice or free-response section.
The academic paper must be 4,000 to 5,000 words. It follows standard academic structure, including an introduction, literature review, methodology, results, discussion, and conclusion. Staying within this range while meeting all rubric criteria is one of the core challenges of the course.
The oral defense is a question-and-answer session that follows your 20-minute presentation. A panel asks questions about your research question, methods, findings, and conclusions. You need to justify your choices and respond to challenges, demonstrating a deep understanding of your own work.
Start with a topic you genuinely care about, then narrow it to a specific gap in existing knowledge. Your question should be focused, feasible within one school year, and complex enough to require original investigation. Feedback from your teacher and outside experts helps you refine it before committing.
Earning a 5 requires a well-defined research question, a rigorous and clearly explained methodology, strong analysis, and a confident oral defense. Starting early, seeking expert feedback, and revising your paper multiple times are the most reliable strategies. See our full guide at /ap-research/5-ap-research for a detailed breakdown.