AP Research resources for every unit, skill, and exam question type.
AP Research covers 5 units, from Question and Explore to Team, Transform, and Transmit. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, and exam prep.
AP Research at a glance
AP Research is a year-long course where you design and carry out an original investigation, then defend it. It demands independent inquiry, source evaluation, evidence-based argument, and clear academic writing.
Not sure where to start?
Start with the overview
Get the big picture: what AP Research covers, how it is scored, and how the units connect.
read the overviewTake a diagnostic
Answer a quick mix of questions to see which units need the most review.
start a diagnosticJump into a unit
Open the unit you are studying now and review its guides, practice, and key terms.
browse all 5 unitsWhat is AP Research?
AP Research covers 5 units, from Question and Explore to Team, Transform, and Transmit. Use this hub for unit study guides, topic review, practice questions, key terms, cheatsheets, score calculators, and exam prep.
What students review in AP Research
- Unit 1: Question and Explore
- Unit 2: Understand and Analyze
- Unit 3: Evaluate Multiple Perspectives
- Unit 4: Synthesize Ideas
- Unit 5: Team, Transform, and Transmit
AP Research units
Start with a unit overview, then use the linked topic guides to review the concepts that appear throughout class and exam practice.
AP Research Unit 1, Question and Explore, is where your year-long research project actually begins.
Taking apart someone else's argument so you actually know what it says, how it works, and whether it holds up.
Putting different scholarly viewpoints on an issue side by side, figuring out how they relate to each other, and judging which arguments hold up and why.
AP Research Unit 4, Synthesize Ideas, is where you stop collecting other people's research and start making your own argument.
AP Research Unit 5, Team, Transform, and Transmit, is the "share your work" stage of the course, where you turn a year of inquiry into a polished academic paper, a presentation built for a real audience, and an oral defense of every choice you made.
Big ideas & exam guides
These guides collect important exam skills, big ideas, essay tasks, and other subject-specific resources.
How to study for AP Research
Build the course map first
Skim the 5 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.
Move from notes to practice
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.
Finish with exam prep
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.
AP Research study tools
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AP Research hard?
AP Research is challenging in a unique way. It is less about memorizing content and more about driving a year-long project from question to final paper and oral defense. The 5 units demand time management, critical thinking, and writing stamina. Because you choose your own topic, motivation stays high. Staying on top of deadlines and seeking feedback early are the two biggest factors in doing well.
How do I start studying for AP Research?
Start by locking in a focused, answerable research question in Unit 1, since everything builds from there. Then treat each unit as a checkpoint: review literature in Units 2 and 3, build your argument in Unit 4, and draft your paper steadily rather than all at once. Set weekly writing goals, save detailed source notes, and use the unit guides on this page to stay on pace.
Which parts of AP Research are weighted most?
Your score comes from one through-course performance task with two components. The Academic Paper of 4,000-5,000 words counts for 75 percent and is scored by College Board. The Presentation and Oral Defense counts for 25 percent and is scored by your teacher. Because the paper carries the most weight, invest the most time in clear argumentation, strong methodology, and ethical citation throughout the year.
What is the AP Research exam structure?
AP Research has no traditional multiple-choice or free-response exam. Instead you complete a through-course performance task: an Academic Paper of 4,000-5,000 words and a Presentation and Oral Defense lasting 15 to 20 minutes total, followed by three or four questions from a panel of three evaluators. The paper is due in the AP Digital Portfolio by late April, and consistent progress across all 5 units matters more than cramming.
How do I find a good AP Research topic?
Pick a topic in an area of genuine personal interest, then narrow it into a question you can actually answer with the data you can collect. Explore the existing scholarly conversation first so you can find a real gap to address. Submit an inquiry proposal to your teacher for feedback, and refine your question after reviewing methods and perspectives in Units 2 and 3. A focused, answerable question makes the rest of the year far smoother.