AP Human Geography

AP Human Geography Course Guide

About the Course

Explore how humans have understood, used, and changed the surface of Earth. You’ll use the tools and thinking processes of geographers to examine patterns of human population, migration, and land use.

Skills You'll Learn

Exam Date

Thursday, May 7, 2023

8 AM Local 

Unit 1: Thinking Geographically

You’ll learn about the tools and methods geographers use in their study of places.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

8%–10% of multiple-choice score

Unit 2: Population and Migration Patterns and Processes

You’ll explore the patterns associated with human populations.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

12%–17% of multiple-choice score

Unit 3: Cultural Patterns and Processes

You’ll focus on how and why language, religion, and other cultural practices spread over space and time.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

12%–17% of multiple-choice score

Unit 4: Political Patterns and Processes

You’ll build on your knowledge of populations and cultural patterns as you learn about the political organization of the world.

Topics may include:

Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land-Use Patterns and Processes

You’ll learn where humans first developed agriculture and how farming practices spread throughout the world.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

12%–17% of multiple-choice score

Unit 6: Cities and Urban Land-Use Patterns and Processes

You’ll explore the origins and influences of urbanization, examining cities across the world and the role of those cities in globalization.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

12%–17% of multiple-choice score

Unit 7: Industrial and Economic Development Patterns 

You’ll study the origins and influences of industrialization, along with the role industrialization plays in economic development.

Topics may include:

On The Exam

12%–17% of multiple-choice score

Exam Components

Section 1: Multiple Choice

60 questions 1hr 50% of Score

The multiple-choice section includes individual questions as well as sets of questions. You’ll be asked to:

Section 2: Free Response

3 questions 1hr 15mins 50% of Score

In the free-response section, you’ll respond to three questions with written answers. All three will present an authentic geographic situation or scenario, and at least two will ask you to explain and analyze spatial relationships across geographic scales.