AP World History FRQ Guide 2026 — DBQ, LEQ & SAQ Tips
The AP World History: Modern free response section is worth 60% of your total score and consists of three question types: Short Answer Questions (SAQs), a Document-Based Question (DBQ), and a Long Essay Question (LEQ). Each type has a specific rubric — master those rubrics and you can systematically earn points even without perfect content knowledge.
APWH FRQ Format Overview
| Question Type | Count | Time | Max Points | % of Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Short Answer Questions (SAQ) | 3 (answer 3 of 4) | 40 min | 9 (3 × 3) | 20% |
| Document-Based Question (DBQ) | 1 | 60 min | 7 | 25% |
| Long Essay Question (LEQ) | 1 (choose 1 of 3) | 40 min | 6 | 15% |
| Total FRQ | — | 140 min | 22 pts | 60% |
The remaining 40% comes from the multiple choice section (55 questions, 55 min).
Short Answer Questions (SAQ) — 3 pts each
SAQs don't require a thesis — they're direct and analytical. Each SAQ has three parts (a, b, c) worth 1 point each. Part (a) typically asks you to describe or explain something from a provided source; parts (b) and (c) typically ask for explanation of broader historical patterns.
SAQ tips:
- Spend exactly 13 minutes on each SAQ. They're worth equal points.
- One well-developed sentence per part is usually enough — these are not mini-essays.
- Describe = state the fact; Explain = state the fact + give a reason why. Don't substitute one for the other.
- SAQ Part 3 is often the hardest — it asks you to evaluate the significance or limitations of a development. Prepare for "to what extent" style reasoning.
- Never begin with "I think" or "In conclusion." Start directly with a historical claim.
Document-Based Question (DBQ) — 7 points
The DBQ provides 7 primary source documents and asks you to construct an essay argument. The rubric:
| Point | Criterion | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Thesis/Claim | Must make a historically defensible claim and establish a line of reasoning beyond restating the prompt |
| 1 | Contextualization | Accurately describes a broader context and explicitly links it to the argument — minimum 1 developed paragraph |
| 2 | Evidence (Documents) | Uses content of at least 3 docs to address topic (1 pt) OR uses content of at least 6 docs to support the argument (2 pts) |
| 1 | Evidence (Beyond Documents) | Uses 1 piece of specific outside evidence not in the documents that supports the argument |
| 1 | Analysis & Reasoning (HAPP) | Accurately explains the relevance of a document's historical situation, audience, purpose, or point of view for 3 docs |
| 1 | Complexity | Demonstrates a complex understanding — corroboration, tension, continuity/change, multiple causes — throughout the essay |
Strategy: Aim for 6 documents used + 1 beyond-document example + 3 HAPP analyses. This gives you 4 of the 7 points just from evidence before your thesis and argument even matter.
Long Essay Question (LEQ) — 6 points
The LEQ has no documents — you construct your argument entirely from memory. You choose 1 of 3 prompts (they cover different time periods of APWH). Rubric:
| Point | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 1 | Thesis/Claim — historically defensible, establishes a line of reasoning |
| 1 | Contextualization — broader context, explicitly linked to the argument |
| 2 | Evidence — specific examples supporting the argument (1 pt for general, 2 pts for specific and substantive) |
| 1 | Analysis & Reasoning — uses a historical reasoning skill (comparison, causation, or continuity/change over time) to frame the argument |
| 1 | Complexity — demonstrates nuanced understanding (turning point, multiple causes, tensions, etc.) |
Choose your LEQ prompt based on the period you know best. The three options span c. 1200–1750, c. 1750–1900, and c. 1900–present. Don't choose based on what you find most interesting — choose based on where you have the most specific evidence.
Writing the APWH Thesis
The thesis must: (1) make a historically defensible claim AND (2) establish a line of reasoning. One sentence that states your claim is not enough — you must also outline HOW you will prove it.
The line of reasoning is the "by doing X, Y, and Z" structure — it tells the reader what your body paragraphs will argue. AP graders look for three discernible claims that your evidence will support.
Contextualization: The Hardest Point
Contextualization requires more than mentioning relevant background — it requires explaining how the broader context shaped the specific developments in the prompt. Most students describe a context but fail to connect it. This single point requires its own dedicated paragraph.
Notice: it describes the context (Mongol power), then explicitly explains how that context enabled the developments in the prompt. The final sentence makes the connection explicit — this is what earns the point.
HAPP Document Analysis
For DBQ documents, you must explain the relevance of at least one of four factors for 3 documents: Historical situation, Audience, Purpose, Point of view. The explanation must say WHY the factor is relevant — not just what it is.
Score Impact of FRQs
| Strategy | Points Earned | Score Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Thesis on every essay (DBQ + LEQ) | +2 | Significant — no thesis = automatic 0 on that essay's reasoning points |
| Contextualization (DBQ + LEQ) | +2 | High — earned by less than 40% of test-takers |
| 6+ documents used (DBQ) | +1 | Use all 7 docs — there's no downside |
| 3 HAPP analyses (DBQ) | +1 | Plan 1 sentence per doc for 3 docs — minimum viable |
| Beyond-document evidence | +1 | Prepare 2–3 outside facts per likely topic before the exam |
Practice the content knowledge behind every APWH FRQ.
AP World History Practice Test →