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Part of: Types of Maps

Graduated Symbol Maps — definition, examples, and uses.

Symbols sized to represent quantity. A short, AP-focused guide to one of the most-tested map types on the exam.

7 min readUpdated May 2026
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Graduated Symbol Maps, defined

Graduated Symbol Maps: Symbols sized to represent quantity. On the AP HuG exam, this map type tests whether you can read what is encoded — not just identify the type by name.

Examples

Three AP-relevant examples:

Example 1
A canonical use of this map type.
Example 2
A second context where this works well.
Example 3
A third illustration from the AP curriculum.

Pros and cons

StrengthWeakness
Graduated Symbol Maps is good for showing where this fits in the AP toolkit.Like every map type, it has weaknesses the AP exam loves to test.
Pairs well with a clear legend.Choice of color scale can mislead.

Graduated Symbol Maps vs. other map types

This map type lives in a family of thirteen. Knowing when to use each — and when each misleads — is what the AP HuG exam actually tests.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.

Is the Graduated Symbol Map a thematic or reference map?

Thematic if it visualizes a variable; reference if it just shows what is where. Most AP-relevant map types are thematic.

How often does the Graduated Symbol Map appear on the AP HuG exam?

It varies by year. Plan to recognize all 13 types; only a handful appear as primary stimulus per exam, but any of them can show up in MCQ stems.

What is the most common AP exam trap with Graduated Symbol Maps?

Confusing this map type with a similar one (e.g., choropleth vs. graduated symbol). The trap is in the legend — read it before answering.

Related

Keep exploring.

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