HomeBlog › AP Environmental Science FRQ Guide 2026

AP Environmental Science FRQ Guide 2026 — APES Free Response Tips & Examples

By Sarah Mitchell · July 4, 2026 · 5 min read · ✓ Verified 2026 CB data

The AP Environmental Science free response section consists of 3 FRQs worth 10 points each — 30 raw FRQ points that make up 40% of your total APES score. Each FRQ has a completely different format, and the scoring criteria are highly specific. This guide shows you exactly what graders look for and how to maximize partial credit.

APES FRQ Format

FRQTypePointsTime
FRQ 1Data Set — analyze provided data, calculate, draw conclusions10~25 min
FRQ 2Document Analysis — use provided documents/graphs to answer questions10~25 min
FRQ 3Synthesis & Evaluation — design solutions, evaluate trade-offs, apply environmental science10~25 min
Total30~70 min

The FRQ section follows the 80-question MC section (90 min). The total exam is approximately 3 hours 15 minutes.

The 3 APES FRQ Types Explained

FRQ 1: Data Set

You're given a data table, graph, or experimental setup and asked to: (a) read data from the source, (b) perform a calculation, (c) analyze a trend or pattern, (d) draw a conclusion and explain it with evidence. The calculation is usually simple — unit conversion, percent change, rate calculation — but the setup and units must be shown.

FRQ 2: Document Analysis

You're given 2–3 documents (data tables, excerpts, graphs, maps) on a related environmental issue. Questions ask you to describe what the documents show, explain relationships between documents, and evaluate the reliability or limitations of the data.

FRQ 3: Synthesis & Evaluation

The open-ended FRQ — usually the hardest and most content-heavy. A scenario describes an environmental problem (a town with water contamination, a region facing deforestation, a community deciding on energy sources). You must identify causes, propose solutions, discuss trade-offs, and evaluate environmental, economic, or social consequences.

APES Calculation FRQs

APES has a reputation for calculations that catch students off guard. The calculations themselves are never harder than middle school math — but the setup requires knowing the right formula. Common calculation types:

Calculation TypeFormula
Percent change(New − Old) / Old × 100%
Population growth rate(Births − Deaths) / Population × 1000 (per thousand) or × 100 (%)
Energy conversionEnergy (J) = Power (W) × Time (s)
EROI (energy return on investment)Energy output / Energy input
Carbon footprintFuel consumed × emission factor
Photovoltaic outputArea × solar irradiance × efficiency
Acute toxicity (LD50)Dose at which 50% of test population dies
Doubling time70 / growth rate (%) — Rule of 70

Calculator strategy: APES allows a four-function calculator for the FRQ section. Always write out your setup (formula, substituted values) before punching numbers — graders award a point for the correct equation even if your arithmetic is wrong.

Document Analysis FRQ Tips

How the APES FRQ Rubric Works

Each of the 10 points per FRQ corresponds to a specific criterion — not a general impression of quality. The rubric is atomic: you either satisfy the criterion or you don't. Most criteria require:

Partial credit in calculations: If your formula setup is correct but your arithmetic is wrong, you typically earn the "setup" point but not the "answer" point. Always show your work — a wrong answer with a correct setup earns partial credit; a wrong answer with no work shown earns nothing.

Worked Example: Energy Calculation

Prompt: A solar panel with an efficiency of 18% receives 900 W/m² of solar irradiance. The panel has an area of 2.5 m². How many watts of electricity does the panel produce?

Step 1 — Write the formula: Power output = solar irradiance × panel area × efficiency
Step 2 — Substitute values: Power output = 900 W/m² × 2.5 m² × 0.18
Step 3 — Calculate and state units: Power output = 900 × 2.5 × 0.18 = 405 W

The panel produces 405 watts of electricity.

The grader awards: 1 point for the correct formula/setup, 1 point for the correct answer with correct units. Notice: efficiency is converted from 18% to 0.18. The most common error is using 18 instead of 0.18, which gives a nonsensical answer 100× too large.

High-Value Content Areas for APES FRQs

These topics appear most frequently and often require calculations or detailed explanation — drill these first:

TopicKey FRQ Requirement
Climate changeDescribe the greenhouse effect mechanism; explain feedback loops; calculate CO₂ ppm changes
Energy sourcesCompare EROI values; calculate solar panel or wind turbine output; discuss subsidies and trade-offs
Population dynamicsCalculate growth rate and doubling time; describe demographic transition; explain age structure pyramids
Water qualityExplain eutrophication; describe the hypoxic zone (dead zone) mechanism; discuss wastewater treatment
Biodiversity / ecosystemsExplain keystone species and trophic cascades; describe ecosystem services; justify conservation strategies
Air pollutionIdentify primary vs. secondary pollutants; explain photochemical smog formation; discuss Clean Air Act
Soil & land useExplain erosion and desertification causes; compare sustainable agriculture methods; discuss IPCC land use data

Test your APES content knowledge with 30 practice questions.

APES Practice Test →

Use the AP Environmental Science score calculator →

Related Guides

SM
Sarah Mitchell В· AP Educator & Tutor

Sarah Mitchell has tutored AP students for 8 years and scored 5s on 11 AP exams. She writes about AP scoring strategy and exam preparation at APScoreHub.

Was this article helpful?