Master these strategies to maximize your score on the AP Statistics exam
The AP Statistics exam is 3 hours long and consists of two sections:
The exam covers nine units with the following approximate weightings:
Unit | Topic | Exam Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Exploring One-Variable Data | 15-23% |
2 | Exploring Two-Variable Data | 5-7% |
3 | Collecting Data | 12-15% |
4 | Probability, Random Variables, and Probability Distributions | 10-20% |
5 | Sampling Distributions | 7-12% |
6 | Inference for Categorical Data: Proportions | 12-15% |
7 | Inference for Quantitative Data: Means | 10-18% |
8 | Inference for Categorical Data: Chi-Square | 2-5% |
9 | Inference for Quantitative Data: Slopes | 2-5% |
For hypothesis tests and confidence intervals, follow this structured approach:
State: We want to test H₀: μ = 100 vs. H₁: μ > 100, where μ is the mean score on the exam.
Plan: We will use a one-sample t-test since we don't know the population standard deviation. We need to check that the sampling distribution is approximately normal, which is reasonable because n = 30 > 30.
Do: t = (x̄ - μ₀)/(s/√n) = (105 - 100)/(15/√30) = 5/2.74 = 1.82. With df = 29, p-value = 0.039.
Conclude: Since p-value = 0.039 < 0.05, we reject H₀. There is sufficient evidence to conclude that the mean score on the exam is greater than 100.
The investigative task is the most challenging free-response question and requires you to integrate multiple statistical concepts.
Average time per question: 2.25 minutes
Suggested time allocation: