Exam Day

Time budgets, traps, and a last-week plan.

APES rewards a clear strategy as much as memorized content. Pacing, eliminating bad MCQ distractors, and answering the verb that's asked all swing your score.

Pacing

SectionTimePer question
MCQ ×8090 min~67 sec
FRQ ×370 min~23 min each

Read all 3 FRQs in the first minute and start with the one whose data you understand best.

MCQ technique

  • Circle EXCEPT / NOT / LEAST in the stem — they flip the meaning.
  • For data stimuli (graphs, tables): identify the IV, DV, and control before reading the answer choices.
  • Eliminate impossible answers first; many APES MCQs hinge on a single distinguishing detail (e.g., primary vs. secondary pollutant).
  • Mark and skip — the easy questions in the back are worth as much as the hard ones in the front.

Calculations (calculator allowed)

  • Pull out the math reference at the start of the FRQ section. Write the formula or starting quantity with units BEFORE plugging numbers — earns the set-up point even if your math is off.
  • Show every conversion factor as a fraction. APES graders only score what they see.
  • Always include UNITS on the final answer. Missing units = lost answer point. This is the #1 way APES students lose points on Q3.
  • Watch for tons vs. metric tons; capital "C" Calorie vs. lowercase calorie; W (power) vs. kWh (energy).

Common pitfalls

Last-week study plan

  1. Drill the math reference until you can apply each formula cold (Rule of 70, half-life, energy unit conversions).
  2. Re-read the priority deep dives — energy calculations, population dynamics, biogeochemical cycles, pollution & climate.
  3. Take 2 official released FRQs under timed conditions; grade with the official rubric. Watch for missing-units point losses on Q3.
  4. Drill all flashcards with the deck — at least one full pass with the K key marking known cards.
  5. Review your lab experiences — College Board references the AP labs (water-quality testing, soil texture analysis, primary productivity, dissolved oxygen, owl-pellet food chains, ecological footprint, biodiversity index).

Night before