Verified for the 2025 AP Statistics examโข4 min readโขCitation:
Welcome to the most awesome AP Class EVER (or as most people just call it, AP Statistics). Let's go on a deep dive into the AP Statistics exam and take a look at how the exam is formatted and scored ๐ฏ
The second and final section on the exam is the free-response questions. The Stats exam has two parts to the FRQ section. Courtesy of the College Board Website, the free-response question will include:
The sixth question, the investigative task, is a separate part of the FRQ and is worth 25% of this section's weight. Free-response questions, like the MCQs, are worth 50% of your total exam score, with the first five questions being worth 37.5% and the last investigative task being worth 12.5% overall!
Free-response questions, similar to the MCQ, also allow the use of a calculator, and the same rules apply as before regarding what types of calculators you will be allowed to use. Check out the MCQ Help for AP Stats Article to learn more <
For the Section Two, the FRQ portion of your exam, you will receive:
There are nine units in AP Statistics that the AP Exam tests ๐ You can reference this table to see which units you should study the most and least:
Unit | Weight |
---|---|
Unit 1: Exploring One-Variable Data | 15-23% |
Unit 2: Exploring Two-Variable Data | 5-7% |
Unit 3: Collecting Data | 12-15% |
Unit 4: Probability, Random Variables, and Probability Distributions | 10-20% |
Unit 5: Sampling Distributions | 7-12% |
Unit 6: Inference for Categorical Data: Proportions | 12-15% |
Unit 7: Inference for Quantitative Data: Means | 10-18% |
Unit 8: Inference for Categorical Data: Chi-Square | 2-5% |
Unit 9: Inference for Quantitative Data: Slopes | 2-5% |
AP Statistics ๐ is a bit of an interesting class because the FRQs follow a unique rubric that isn't anything like the rubrics of other AP exams. Make sure that you understand how points are earned and lost on the exam!
Image Courtesy of Question 1 of the 2018 AP Statistics Exam.Just like as shown in the image above, each question part will be based on ratings: essentially correct, partially correct, and incorrect. Depending on your EPIs, each question will receive a score from one to four.
After each part is rated, your overall score will be converted to the 1-4 scale. The cumulative score of all of the FRQs is your score for the section. For more information on the AP Stats FRQs โ๏ธ, make sure to check out:
๐ Read: AP Stats - Statistics Free Response Questions
AP Statistics is a pretty hard class and if you are considering taking it or self-studying, make sure to check out the articles:
๐ Read: AP Stats - Is AP Stats Hard? Is AP Stats Worth It? (coming soon)
๐ Read: AP Stats - Self-Study and Homeschool
However, if you continue to study ๐ with Fiveable, you can make the AP Stats FRQ section completely Fiveable (see what we did there)! So, make sure to take a look at all of our AP Stats Resources at Fiveable to do amazing on your exam ๐