AP Physics study strategy

How to study for AP Physics so the facts actually stick — and how to use the tools on this site to get there with short, daily sessions rather than last-minute cramming.

1. Know the exam

The AP Physics 1 exam is 2 hours 40 minutes long and split into two equally weighted sections. It is scored 1–5; a calculator and the AP Physics 1 equation sheet may be used throughout.

SectionFormatTimeWeight
Section I40 multiple-choice questions80 min50%
Section II4 free-response questions80 min50%

The four free-response questions are predictable in type: mathematical routines, translation between representations, experimental design and analysis, and qualitative/quantitative translation. Knowing the format means no surprises on exam day.

2. Learn the task verbs

Points are lost every year by answering the wrong "type" of question. Train yourself to spot the task verb and give exactly what it asks for:

3. Use active recall, not re-reading

Reading notes feels productive but is one of the weakest ways to revise. Active recall — trying to retrieve an answer from memory before checking — is far more effective, and it is exactly what this site is built around:

4. Space it out

Revisit each topic several times with gaps of days, not in one long block. Short daily sessions beat a single marathon: your per-topic scores show what to come back to, and correctly answered questions and flashcards are deliberately set aside so you do not waste time on what you already know.

5. Master the math and the models

AP Physics 1 rewards quantitative fluency as much as recall. Drill the calculations the exam leans on: kinematics equations, Newton's second law with free-body diagrams, work and energy, momentum and impulse, torque and rotational dynamics, simple harmonic motion, and fluids (pressure, buoyancy, Bernoulli). Just as important: reading and sketching graphs, translating between verbal, graphical and mathematical representations, designing experiments, and justifying claims with evidence and physics reasoning.

6. A simple unit-by-unit plan

7. Common mistakes to avoid

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