English AP Courses
AP English Language and AP English Literature — the two essay-driven AP courses that nearly every college-bound junior or senior considers.
About this category
AP English Language and Composition focuses on rhetorical analysis, synthesis, and argument writing using non-fiction passages, while AP English Literature and Composition focuses on close reading of fiction, poetry, and drama. Both exams pair a multiple-choice section with three timed essays.
Each course tile below links to a full course detail page with the official exam format and timing, the published unit weightings, six annotated FRQ walkthroughs, a scoring-rubric breakdown, a tips-for-a-5 checklist, and a curated list of recommended resources. Every page on this site is server-rendered HTML — search engines and screen readers see the same content you see, and curl returns the full text of every page.
English AP Courses
How to use a category hub
Category hubs are the fastest way to navigate ExamEdge US when you are taking more than one AP course in the same field. Most US high school students who sit a STEM AP exam in May (Calculus AB, Physics 1, Chemistry, Biology, Statistics) are also taking at least one other course in the same category, and the study habits that move scores in one of these courses tend to move scores in the others — particularly the habit of working FRQs against the published rubric rather than re-reading the textbook.
Open two course pages side by side from this hub and compare their exam format tables. You will notice that the College Board uses a small number of recurring section structures across categories: the Calculus / Statistics / Computer Science exams share a calculator-vs-no-calculator split; the History exams share the DBQ-and-LEQ structure; the language exams share the four-task interpretive / interpersonal / presentational / cultural format. Recognizing the recurring structures lets you transfer pacing strategy from one exam to the next without re-learning the format.
From here, jump into any individual course detail page, then drill into a unit guide or an FRQ walkthrough. Use the study planner to spread the work across six weeks, and use the quiz tools page to escalate from single-topic drills to mixed-topic drills as test day approaches.