Key vocabulary and core concepts. Best for rebuilding certainty before you add pressure.
Conceptual multiple-choice with realistic distractors. Best when you want realistic distractors and faster exam decisions.
Graphs, setups, and data interpretation. Best for figures, setups, graphs, and data interpretation.
Your first study loop should feel obvious.
Start with one unit, let the dashboard expose the weak spots, then move into mixed AP review and FRQs once recall starts to stabilize.
Step 01
Start with one unit
Use unit MCQ review when you are relearning content, preparing for a quiz, or trying to stabilize one chapter fast.
Step 02
Add mixed AP pressure
Switch to all-unit MCQ review once single-unit practice feels steadier and you want harder exam-style decisions.
Step 03
Finish with FRQs
Use written response practice to convert recall into explanation, justification, and stimulus interpretation.
Your dashboard fills in as soon as you start answering questions.
Use the progress view to see which units keep slipping, which topics you are repeatedly missing, and whether your work is staying in Foundation mode for too long.
What will appear here
Overall accuracy, current streak, redo queue, unit-by-unit accuracy, and the topics you keep missing.
Best workflow
Use unit MCQs for repair, mixed review for pressure, then FRQs when recall needs to survive in writing.
MCQ modes
These labels stay consistent across unit and mixed practice, so students know what a session is demanding before they start.
Key vocabulary and core concepts.
Conceptual multiple-choice with realistic distractors.
Graphs, setups, and data interpretation.
FRQ modes
Use shorter response checks for rapid retrieval, then move into fuller FRQ work when you want written AP-style reasoning.
Shorter response checks for rapid concept recall.
Free-response practice with structured prompts and scoring notes.