10 questions per unit. One answer should be "1", another one should be "2", etc. all the way up to 10. So, if you don't have answers 0-9 in the end then you know you have mistake(s) to find and correct.
Pros:
Quick unit practice with some guidance on what the answers should be.
Cons:
Not a lot of practice per unit.
Pros:
Lots of practice and videos that are organized by skill. When you miss a question, you can click the "get help" link and compare your work to the correct work to quickly learn from your mistake.
If you work on the site while logged in, it will keep a % of how much of the Calculus course you have gone through. It helps most people to stay motivated when they see that they are making progress, like KA tracks.
Cons:
Since the assignments focus on one skill at a time, it doesn't necessarily let you practice the connections between topics.
Full Length Practice Exam 1
Full Length Practice Exam 2
1998 - View / Download
This is the entire 1988 exam with questions, answers, scoring guidelines, ect.
Keep in mind some parts of this AP exam have changed over the years.
1988 - View / Download
This is the entire 1988 exam with questions, answers, scoring guidelines, ect.
Keep in mind some parts of this AP exam have changed over the years.
Pros:
Created by College Board (the people who make and grade your AP exams).
Cons:
You will have to let me know if you want any of the progress checks unlocked for practice. I tend to open them all up at the end of the year for reviewing for the AP exam, but I do not mind opening them sooner if you woud like to utilize them.
Some of the questions are harder than you are ready for at the beginning of the year. I would not recommend this as a primary resource except when reviewing for this AP exam.
Pros:
Lots of practice and the solutions are provided for you to check your work.
Very detailed notes that are helpful to read through to make sure you fully understand the topic.
Cons:
This is really designed for College Calculus so some of the AP Calculus AB topics will be on their Calculus 1 and Calculus 2 pages. AP Calculus BC should cover the rest of the Calculus 2 topics.
While textbooks are not as popular with students, our textbook still provides examples, explanations, tons of practice and solutions to check with.
You can access the pdf version of the textbook at this link. You will need to be logged into your FAYAR account for access.
This site has a ton of "practice test". Each practice test seems to have around 8 to 10 questions. Since most of these "practice tests" are not unit or content specific, these would be best utilized once you are reviewing for the AP exam.
This is a collection of released multiple choice questions from 1969 through 1998. The solutions are provided and some steps are also shown. This is great practice if you feel MCQs are your weakness. The downside is that since some of the topics are outdated, they may not be relivant anymore. For example, you use to need to be able to work with a NORMAL line. It just means perpendicular but that is no longer tested. There are probably a few other outdated things as this covers such a wide range of years from a long time ago.
This series was put together by two Calculus teachers that have had close ties working with College Board in the past for work with the AP Calculus exams.
What this resource has to offer:
Episode 1: MCQ without calculator
Episode 2: MCQ with calculator
Episode 3: Particle Motion FRQ with calculator
Episode 4: Graphic Stem FRQ without calculator
Episode 5: Multi Representation FRQ without calculator
Episode 6: Differential Equations and Implicit Differentiation without calculator
Episode 7: Tabular Super FRQ without calculator
Episode 8: Contextual Separable Differential Equations without calculator
Episode 9: Area and Volume with mixed calculator usage
Free Response Questions account for exactly half of the earnable points on the AP exam.
Many FRQs seem very challenging but with practice you can get better at the justifications, and you can learn what types and questions are most common on FRQs.
I have collected, organized, and tried to make it as user-friendly as possible by creating and providing the FRQ database that you can access on this link. Pay attention to the tabs at the bottom to get the most out of the database.
This google drive has a large collection of circuits to practice with.
This website has a collection of manipulative applets for 30 calculus topics to help you visual how the calculus works.
FlippedMath offers notes, videos going over the notes, practice, and extra practice for all the Calculus topics for both AB and BC. They offer two versions where one is more smaller lessons and one that is less but longer lessons.