AP Gov FRQ four questions, four distinct types.
Section II of the AP U.S. Government and Politics exam is four free-response questions in 100 minutes, worth 50% of your score. Each is a fixed type with its own approach. Here is what each one asks and how the rubric awards points.
The format at a glance
The four questions are always the same four types, so you can prepare a method for each.
The four question types
Each type rewards a specific structure rather than free-form writing.
What it tests
The questions draw on the foundations of American democracy, the branches of government, civil liberties and civil rights, political ideologies, and participation. The Argument Essay leans on the nine required foundational documents and the fifteen required Supreme Court cases, so knowing them cold pays off.
Where students lose points
How to practice
Work the College Board released AP Government free-response questions and memorize the structure each type expects. Drill the SCOTUS comparison and the Argument Essay first, since they carry the most points and the most structure. Pair your prep with the AP Government Concepts guides, then check a raw score with the AP Gov score calculator.
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.
How many FRQs are on the AP Gov exam?
Four, in 100 minutes, worth half of your total score. Each is a fixed type: Concept Application, Quantitative Analysis, SCOTUS Comparison, and the Argument Essay.
What is the SCOTUS Comparison FRQ?
You compare a non-required Supreme Court case to one of the fifteen required cases, usually through a shared constitutional clause or principle.
Does the AP Gov Argument Essay need specific evidence?
Yes. It must use at least one of the nine required foundational documents as evidence, plus your own reasoning and a response to an alternate view.