AP Art History Study Guide
Free AP Art History exam prep: official exam format and unit weightings, six annotated FRQ walkthroughs, a scoring-rubric breakdown, a tips-for-a-5 checklist, and a unit-by-unit study guide for every unit in the College Board AP Course & Exam Description.
About AP Art History
AP Art History is one of the 38 College Board Advanced Placement courses offered to US high school students. Like every AP exam, AP Art History is scored on a 1–5 scale, with most US colleges granting credit or placement for scores of 3 and above; specific policies vary by institution and should be checked using the College Board AP Credit Policy Search. The exam runs 3 hours end-to-end and is split between a multiple-choice section and a free-response section, with the official section breakdown documented on the exam format page.
The 12-unit framework below mirrors the order in which the College Board AP Course and Exam Description presents the material. Work through it in sequence if you are using ExamEdge US as a primary review, or jump to a specific unit if you are patching a weakness identified by a practice exam. Every unit guide on this site has the same four-part structure — a short narrative explainer, five key ideas you can copy onto a study card, four multiple-choice practice questions with explanations, and links to the neighboring units.
Pair this index with the scoring-rubric breakdown and the tips-for-a-5 checklist from week 1. The fastest path from a baseline diagnostic to a real score lift is rubric awareness, not additional content review — and that's what the rubric and tips pages are designed to install.
Course pages
Exam format
Section timing, official unit weightings, and FRQ types.
Scoring rubric
How raw scores combine into the 1–5 AP score, plus the four most common scoring errors.
How to get a 5
A 10-item checklist of practical, rubric-aware moves.
FRQ walkthroughs
6 annotated FRQs with rubric, sample response, and grader commentary.
Recommended resources
Curated free-first list — College Board, Khan Academy, OpenStax.
Units in the AP framework
- 1Global Prehistory (30,000–500 BCE)
- 2Ancient Mediterranean (3,500 BCE–300 CE)
- 3Early Europe and Colonial Americas (200–1750 CE)
- 4Later Europe and Americas (1750–1980)
- 5Indigenous Americas (1,000 BCE–1980)
- 6Africa (1100–1980)
- 7West and Central Asia (500 BCE–1980)
- 8South, East, and Southeast Asia (300 BCE–1980)
- 9The Pacific (700–1980)
- 10Global Contemporary (1980–Present)
- 11Free-Response Strategy
- 12Full-Length Practice Exam
FRQ walkthroughs
Suggested approach
Treat each unit as a single study session: read the four short paragraphs of notes, copy the five key ideas onto a physical card, attempt the four practice questions before revealing the explanations, and self-score honestly. If you score three or four, mark the unit as "maintain" and revisit weekly. If you score two or fewer, mark as "rebuild" and schedule a return visit within seven days. Spread the unit sessions across the weeks before your test date using the six-week study planner.