4 min read•july 11, 2024
Congratulations! You successfully completed AP® Seminar, a grueling course of 2+ research papers (more if you did mock papers), and multiple presentations with teams that may or may not have worked well with you.
You likely have heard from your teacher and former AP Seminar students about how Research is a completely different course. Continue reading to find out whether AP Research is hard or even worth taking. You got this 🎉
Let's do some quantitative analysis and take a look at the pass rates for AP Research!
Year | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
2020 | 8.8% | 32.1% | 31.5% | 25% | 2.6% |
2019 | 10.8% | 22.3% | 43.1% | 19.3% | 4.5% |
2018 | 11.4% | 23.8% | 40.2% | 19.6% | 5% |
Generally speaking, about 75% of students pass the AP Research exam. Note that this year's results may be a little different due to the lack of a presentation/oral defense portion (POD).
This course does not have an intense workload as long as you stay organized. This course is the most problematic to procrastinate for, as the 4,000-5,000 word requirement means that waiting until the last week will likely result in a failing AP score 👀
Here's some great advice from a past AP Research student:
"Understand the limits/scope of the paper: you have one school year and do not have like a lot of resources and money. Nevertheless, pick what you’re interested in—you can use the method of another study but to a different audience to fill the gap." —Abby Liang
Another great answer from another AP Research student:
"I would say it’s a lot of independent work as your teacher can’t directly give feedback on your paper, so depending on your workflow, this class may be hard." —Solomon Kim
AP Research's difficulty also depends on the workload from your other courses. While there isn't any inherent memorization or testing, the writing process and preparation for the presentation may be burdensome for many students who are also taking other AP courses. At that point, it becomes important to ask . . .
The answer is absolutely, yes! One of the best benefits of AP Research is gaining either the AP Seminar and Research Certificate 📜 (passing both classes) or AP Capstone Diploma 🎓 (passing both classes and 4 other AP exams). You can show this off to colleges and can boost your college application!
This course can be an early introduction to conducting independent research! While you are likely not receiving any grants 💰 from your high school nor gaining assistance from high-level professors, writing the different aspects of a research paper in high school is incredibly impressive.
Furthermore, AP Research is incredibly multidisciplinary, which means that it won't immediately give you credit for any college classes. However, you can show your research paper to your advisor, and they could advise as to whether you could conduct further research in your higher education with a professor.
But don't just take it from me—other students concur that AP Research is worth it!
"It's 1000% worth taking because it teaches you college-level skills and shows you a little bit more about what research (not just finding information, but creating new knowledge) looks like." —Solomon Kim
"I really liked it and do recommend it because this class teaches you to work independently and do research (from lit review to data analysis) on something you’re actually passionate about! It’s also super cool to learn everyone else’s topic from your class." —Abby Liang
"AP Research is definitely worth taking because you will understand the methodology and research processes behind a lot of studies you might read in college." —Fatima Raja
After coming out of AP Research, you're going to be stronger in your analytic abilities while also learning how to write at the expected higher education level. You'll be glad you didn't cap on Capstone 😉
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4 min read•july 11, 2024
Congratulations! You successfully completed AP® Seminar, a grueling course of 2+ research papers (more if you did mock papers), and multiple presentations with teams that may or may not have worked well with you.
You likely have heard from your teacher and former AP Seminar students about how Research is a completely different course. Continue reading to find out whether AP Research is hard or even worth taking. You got this 🎉
Let's do some quantitative analysis and take a look at the pass rates for AP Research!
Year | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
2020 | 8.8% | 32.1% | 31.5% | 25% | 2.6% |
2019 | 10.8% | 22.3% | 43.1% | 19.3% | 4.5% |
2018 | 11.4% | 23.8% | 40.2% | 19.6% | 5% |
Generally speaking, about 75% of students pass the AP Research exam. Note that this year's results may be a little different due to the lack of a presentation/oral defense portion (POD).
This course does not have an intense workload as long as you stay organized. This course is the most problematic to procrastinate for, as the 4,000-5,000 word requirement means that waiting until the last week will likely result in a failing AP score 👀
Here's some great advice from a past AP Research student:
"Understand the limits/scope of the paper: you have one school year and do not have like a lot of resources and money. Nevertheless, pick what you’re interested in—you can use the method of another study but to a different audience to fill the gap." —Abby Liang
Another great answer from another AP Research student:
"I would say it’s a lot of independent work as your teacher can’t directly give feedback on your paper, so depending on your workflow, this class may be hard." —Solomon Kim
AP Research's difficulty also depends on the workload from your other courses. While there isn't any inherent memorization or testing, the writing process and preparation for the presentation may be burdensome for many students who are also taking other AP courses. At that point, it becomes important to ask . . .
The answer is absolutely, yes! One of the best benefits of AP Research is gaining either the AP Seminar and Research Certificate 📜 (passing both classes) or AP Capstone Diploma 🎓 (passing both classes and 4 other AP exams). You can show this off to colleges and can boost your college application!
This course can be an early introduction to conducting independent research! While you are likely not receiving any grants 💰 from your high school nor gaining assistance from high-level professors, writing the different aspects of a research paper in high school is incredibly impressive.
Furthermore, AP Research is incredibly multidisciplinary, which means that it won't immediately give you credit for any college classes. However, you can show your research paper to your advisor, and they could advise as to whether you could conduct further research in your higher education with a professor.
But don't just take it from me—other students concur that AP Research is worth it!
"It's 1000% worth taking because it teaches you college-level skills and shows you a little bit more about what research (not just finding information, but creating new knowledge) looks like." —Solomon Kim
"I really liked it and do recommend it because this class teaches you to work independently and do research (from lit review to data analysis) on something you’re actually passionate about! It’s also super cool to learn everyone else’s topic from your class." —Abby Liang
"AP Research is definitely worth taking because you will understand the methodology and research processes behind a lot of studies you might read in college." —Fatima Raja
After coming out of AP Research, you're going to be stronger in your analytic abilities while also learning how to write at the expected higher education level. You'll be glad you didn't cap on Capstone 😉
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