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APUSH · Progress Checks

AP U.S. History Progress Check walkthroughs.

Unit-by-unit explanations of the MCQ and FRQ content on AP Classroom Progress Checks. Each unit page shows the topics tested, the most common student mistakes, and a tip from someone who scored a 5.

Updated July 2025 Written by Mahmudul Hasan Free · No signup
9 units

All units, expandable.

Click a unit to see MCQ topics, FRQ structure, common mistakes, and a tip from a student who scored a 5.

U01Period 1: 1491–160716 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Pre-Columbian
  • Encounter
  • Spanish empire
FRQ guidance
  • Columbian Exchange
Common mistake
Treating Native American peoples as monolithic.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Distinguish Pueblo, Iroquois, Mississippian, etc.
U02Period 2: 1607–175422 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Colonization
  • Slavery
  • Salutary neglect
FRQ guidance
  • Colonial comparison FRQ
Common mistake
Comparing colonies without naming specific founders/economies.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Chesapeake = tobacco/Jamestown. New England = Puritan/town meetings.
U03Period 3: 1754–180022 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Revolution
  • Constitution
  • Federalism
FRQ guidance
  • Federalist vs. Anti-Federalist
Common mistake
Confusing the Federalist Papers with Federalists generally.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Federalist Papers = 1788 pro-Constitution. Federalists = Hamilton’s party.
U04Period 4: 1800–184822 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Jeffersonian/Jacksonian
  • Reform
  • Westward
FRQ guidance
  • Second Great Awakening
Common mistake
Treating Jacksonian democracy as inclusive.
Tip from a 5-scorer
It expanded white male suffrage; restricted others. State clearly.
U05Period 5: 1844–187724 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Manifest Destiny
  • Civil War
  • Reconstruction
FRQ guidance
  • Causes of Civil War
Common mistake
Naming “states’ rights” without naming slavery as the central issue.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Slavery is the through-line. Say so.
U06Period 6: 1865–189822 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Industrialization
  • Gilded Age
  • Populism
FRQ guidance
  • Robber-baron analysis
Common mistake
Conflating industrialists.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Carnegie = steel. Rockefeller = oil. Morgan = finance.
U07Period 7: 1890–194524 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Progressivism
  • WWI
  • WWII
FRQ guidance
  • Progressive reforms
Common mistake
Treating Progressivism as monolithic.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Progressives included white supremacists. Note the limits.
U08Period 8: 1945–198022 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Cold War
  • Civil Rights
  • Counterculture
FRQ guidance
  • Civil Rights movement
Common mistake
Limiting Civil Rights to MLK and bus boycotts.
Tip from a 5-scorer
Name SNCC, CORE, Malcolm X, Black Panthers as distinct strands.
U09Period 9: 1980–present16 questions covered · MCQ + FRQ walkthroughs
MCQ guidance
  • Reagan
  • Globalization
  • Modern conservatism
FRQ guidance
  • Reagan-era policy analysis
Common mistake
Treating Reagan-era conservatism as just “tax cuts.”
Tip from a 5-scorer
Three pillars: economic, social, foreign. Address each.
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Practice loop
Do a Progress Check. Score yourself. Adjust.

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Frequently asked questions

Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.

What's the difference between APUSH Progress Checks and the real AP exam?

Progress Checks are unscaled — they’re unit-by-unit MCQ + FRQ practice that AP Classroom assigns. The real AP exam uses a curve to map your raw composite to a 1–5. The walkthroughs above explain the reasoning; the calculator estimates your exam score.

Should I do every Progress Check or skip around?

Do them in order the first time — each one builds on the last. If you’re reviewing in May, target the units where you’re weakest using the unit summaries above.

Why don't you publish exact answer keys?

AP Classroom assignments are graded as your own work. Posting raw keys would help cheaters and harm the students using Curve for actual studying. Our walkthroughs explain reasoning, not letter answers.

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