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AP ExamUC A-G · Section AUC Honors · +1.0 GPAMay 2026

AP World History: Modern
From 1200 CE to Today

WHAP: Civilizations, Empires, and Global Change

The most comprehensive agentic AP World History course. From the Mongol Empire to globalization — master DBQ sourcing, LEQ argumentation, and every historical thinking skill — guided by Prof. Amara Osei and SofAI.

Start with Prof. Amara
AP Resources
5
Score Target
Quick LinksCollegeBoard AP World History VRS AP Resources AP Seminar Exemplar ↗
Exam: May 2026
Exam Blueprint

Four Section Types · MC + SAQ + DBQ + LEQ

🔵

Multiple Choice — Source-Based

Section I · Part A
40%55 min55 questions
  • › Every question is anchored to a primary or secondary source (text, map, image, chart)
  • › Tests all 4 time periods and 7 themes across diverse civilizations
  • › Requires historical thinking skills: causation, comparison, CCOT, contextualization

Score 5 Tip: Read the source first, then the question. The answer is almost always supported by the source itself — use the document's context (who wrote it, when, why) to eliminate wrong answers.

🟣

Short-Answer Questions (SAQs)

Section I · Part B
15%40 min3 of 4 questions answered
  • › SAQs 1–2 are required; choose SAQ 3 or SAQ 4 for the third answer
  • › Each SAQ has 3 parts (a, b, c) worth 1 point each (3 points total)
  • › No thesis required — answer each part with 3–5 precise sentences

Score 5 Tip: Answer all three parts of each SAQ completely. Each part is worth one point. Write concisely — one clear sentence per point is enough. Always use historical evidence (name, date, event).

🟠

Document-Based Question (DBQ)

Section II · DBQ
25%60 min (15 min reading)1 essay with 7 documents
  • › Contextualization: ~1 paragraph situating the topic in broader historical context
  • › Thesis: defensible claim that establishes a line of reasoning (not just restate the prompt)
  • › Evidence: use at least 6 of 7 documents; earn sourcing credit (HAPP) for at least 3
  • › Complexity: demonstrate nuance — contradiction, multiple causes, or a broader context connection

Score 5 Tip: Use the 15-minute reading period to annotate every document for HAPP (Historical context, Audience, Purpose, Point of view). Your thesis should argue WHY — not just list what happened.

🟡

Long Essay Question (LEQ)

Section II · LEQ
20%40 min1 essay (choice of 3 prompts)
  • › Choose 1 of 3 prompts: each covers a different time period
  • › Thesis: defensible claim with line of reasoning (argue a category of analysis)
  • › Contextualization: broad historical context before/after the time period
  • › Evidence: at least 2 specific examples supporting the argument; complexity point available

Score 5 Tip: Pick the LEQ prompt you know the MOST evidence for — not necessarily the one that sounds easiest. A strong thesis + 3 specific examples + contextualization = 5/6 points minimum.

Score Distribution (2024)

Where Students Land

~340,000 students take AP World History: Modern annually. Only ~11% score a 5 — mastering essay writing is the difference.

5
Extremely Qualified
← Your target11%
4
Well Qualified
20%
3
Qualified
27%
2
Possibly Qualified
24%
1
No Recommendation
18%

Score 5 Roadmap

Your point targets for the May 2026 exam

🔵

Multiple Choice Target: ≥ 70% (~38 of 55 questions correct)

✍️

SAQ Target: 3/3 on each SAQ — specific evidence, complete all 3 parts

📜

DBQ Target: 6/7 — thesis, context, 6 docs, 3 HAPP sourcing, complexity

📝

LEQ Target: 5/6 — thesis, context, evidence, skill, complexity

CollegeBoard CED Aligned

Four Time Periods — c. 1200 to Present

🏯
PERIOD 1~22%

Period 1: c. 1200–1450 — Networks of Exchange & Land-Based Empires

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Dar al-Islam and the spread of Islam across Afro-Eurasia
  • Mongol Empire: conquests, Pax Mongolica, and the facilitation of trade
  • Silk Roads and Indian Ocean trade networks
  • Sub-Saharan African kingdoms: Mali Empire (Mansa Musa), Great Zimbabwe
  • Song Dynasty China: technological innovations (gunpowder, printing, compass)
  • The Americas: Aztec Triple Alliance, Inca Empire, Maya city-states

Key Terms

Silk Roads
overland and maritime trade networks connecting Afro-Eurasia from c. 200 BCE onward
Pax Mongolica
period of relative peace under Mongol rule enabling long-distance trade across Central Asia
Dar al-Islam
the 'house of Islam' — regions where Islamic law and culture predominated
diasporic communities
merchant groups settling in foreign trade cities, maintaining home culture
tribute system
East Asian diplomacy where lesser states paid tribute to China in exchange for recognition and trade
Mansa Musa
14th-century Mali ruler whose 1324 hajj to Mecca demonstrated West African wealth
syncretic
blending of different religious or cultural traditions into a new form
corvée labor
compulsory unpaid labor demanded by rulers, used extensively by Inca and other states
FRQ Practice Prompt

SAQ Practice: (a) Describe ONE way the Mongol Empire facilitated trade across Afro-Eurasia in the 13th–14th centuries. (b) Explain ONE reason why Song Dynasty China's technological innovations spread along the Silk Roads. (c) Explain ONE way Islamic merchants shaped trade networks across the Indian Ocean in c. 1200–1450.

Practice with Prof. Amara →

Curated Video Lessons

The Silk Road and Ancient Trade — Crash Course World History
content

The Silk Road and Ancient Trade — Crash Course World History

Crash Course12 min
Mongol Conquests — Crash Course World History
content

Mongol Conquests — Crash Course World History

Crash Course11 min
AP World History Period 1 Review — Heimler's History
review

AP World History Period 1 Review — Heimler's History

Heimler's History14 min
⛵
PERIOD 2~22%

Period 2: c. 1450–1750 — Maritime Empires & the Columbian Exchange

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • European maritime exploration: Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, British, French empires
  • Columbian Exchange: transfer of plants, animals, diseases, and people
  • Atlantic slave trade: origins, Middle Passage, African diaspora
  • Spanish encomienda and mita systems in the Americas
  • Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires (Gunpowder Empires)
  • Protestant Reformation and its political consequences in Europe
  • Russian Empire expansion under Ivan IV and Peter the Great

Key Terms

Columbian Exchange
transfer of plants, animals, diseases, and people between Old and New Worlds after 1492
encomienda
Spanish labor system granting colonists the right to indigenous labor in exchange for Christianization
Middle Passage
the forced voyage of enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean to the Americas
Gunpowder Empires
Muslim empires (Ottoman, Safavid, Mughal) that rose to power partly through firearms technology
mercantilism
economic theory that colonies exist to enrich the mother country through trade surpluses
joint-stock company
business owned by shareholders used to fund expensive maritime expeditions (e.g., Dutch East India Company)
syncretism
blending of indigenous, African, and European religious practices in colonial Americas
devshirme
Ottoman system of conscripting Christian boys to become elite soldiers (Janissaries) or administrators
FRQ Practice Prompt

LEQ Practice (CCOT): Evaluate the extent to which the Columbian Exchange transformed economic systems in the Americas between c. 1450 and 1750. In your essay: write a contextualization paragraph, a thesis with a line of reasoning, and use at least two specific pieces of evidence. Consider both continuities and changes.

Practice with Prof. Amara →

Curated Video Lessons

The Columbian Exchange — Crash Course World History
content

The Columbian Exchange — Crash Course World History

Crash Course11 min
The Atlantic Slave Trade — Crash Course World History
content

The Atlantic Slave Trade — Crash Course World History

Crash Course11 min
AP World History Period 2 Review — Heimler's History
review

AP World History Period 2 Review — Heimler's History

Heimler's History15 min
⚙️
PERIOD 3~22%

Period 3: c. 1750–1900 — Industrialization, Revolutions & Imperialism

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • Industrial Revolution: causes in Britain, spread to Europe and North America
  • Atlantic Revolutions: American, French, Haitian, Latin American independence movements
  • Nationalism and the formation of Italy and Germany (Unification movements)
  • New Imperialism: European colonization of Africa (Berlin Conference 1884) and Asia
  • Meiji Restoration in Japan and selective Westernization
  • Qing Dynasty decline and Opium Wars in China
  • Abolition of slavery and changing labor systems (indentured servitude, sharecropping)

Key Terms

Industrial Revolution
shift from agrarian/craft production to machine-based manufacturing, beginning in Britain c. 1760s
proletariat
industrial working class that sells labor for wages
nationalism
ideology that people sharing culture, language, or history should form their own state
Berlin Conference
1884–85 meeting where European powers divided Africa into colonies without African consent
Meiji Restoration
1868 Japanese political revolution that industrialized Japan through selective adoption of Western technology
Social Darwinism
misapplication of evolution to justify European racial superiority and imperialism
indentured servitude
contract labor system replacing slavery, often exploiting South Asian and Chinese workers
laissez-faire
economic doctrine opposing government interference in markets
FRQ Practice Prompt

DBQ Practice Setup: Imagine you have 7 documents about the causes and effects of European imperialism in Africa (1880–1914). Before reading: identify what types of sources would best represent African perspectives (HAPP). After analyzing: write a thesis arguing whether economic or political factors were the PRIMARY driver of the Berlin Conference and New Imperialism.

Practice with Prof. Amara →

Curated Video Lessons

The Industrial Revolution — Crash Course World History
content

The Industrial Revolution — Crash Course World History

Crash Course12 min
Imperialism: Crash Course World History
content

Imperialism: Crash Course World History

Crash Course12 min
AP World History Period 3 Review — Heimler's History
review

AP World History Period 3 Review — Heimler's History

Heimler's History16 min
🌐
PERIOD 4~34%

Period 4: c. 1900–Present — World Wars, Cold War & Globalization

Expand ›

Key Topics

  • World War I: causes (MAIN), consequences, and the Treaty of Versailles
  • World War II: fascism, Holocaust, Pacific theater, atomic bomb
  • Cold War: US-Soviet rivalry, proxy wars (Korea, Vietnam), nuclear deterrence
  • Decolonization in Africa and Asia: Indian independence, African nationalism
  • Chinese Revolution (1949) and Mao Zedong's policies
  • Globalization: economic integration, WTO, multinational corporations, migration
  • Technology and communication: Green Revolution, internet, digital economy

Key Terms

total war
conflict mobilizing entire societies — military, economic, and civilian resources
Treaty of Versailles
1919 peace treaty imposing reparations and territorial losses on Germany, fueling WWII resentments
Cold War
1947–1991 ideological and geopolitical rivalry between the US and USSR without direct combat
decolonization
process by which colonized peoples won independence from European empires, primarily 1945–1975
proxy war
conflict where superpowers support opposing sides without direct military engagement (e.g., Korea, Vietnam)
nonaligned movement
group of nations refusing to align with either the US or USSR during the Cold War
globalization
increasing interconnection of economies, cultures, and politics worldwide
neocolonialism
continued economic dependence of formerly colonized nations on wealthy powers after formal independence
Green Revolution
mid-20th-century introduction of high-yield crops, fertilizers, and irrigation dramatically increasing food production
FRQ Practice Prompt

LEQ Practice (Comparison): Compare the causes of World War I and World War II. Write a full LEQ response: contextualization paragraph, defensible thesis with a line of reasoning (e.g., argue whether nationalism or economic competition was the more significant shared cause), and at least two specific pieces of evidence for each war.

Practice with Prof. Amara →

Curated Video Lessons

World War I — Crash Course World History
content

World War I — Crash Course World History

Crash Course13 min
Decolonization and Nationalism — Crash Course World History
content

Decolonization and Nationalism — Crash Course World History

Crash Course12 min
AP World History Period 4 Review — Heimler's History
review

AP World History Period 4 Review — Heimler's History

Heimler's History17 min
60% of Total Score

FRQ Mastery Suite

AP World History's writing section (DBQ + LEQ + SAQ) is where the exam is won or lost. Master the rubric and you can score a 5 even with imperfect content knowledge.

FRQ Coach →
📜25%
Section II · DBQ

Document-Based Question

DBQ · 60 min (15 min reading)

Analyze 7 primary/secondary documents to write an argumentative essay. Must include thesis, contextualization, evidence from at least 6 documents, sourcing (HAPP) for at least 3 documents, and a complexity demonstration.

Scoring Criteria
· Thesis (1 pt): defensible claim with line of reasoning — not just restating the prompt
· Contextualization (1 pt): ~1 paragraph of broader historical context before your argument
· Evidence (3 pts): use at least 4 docs (1 pt) or at least 6 docs (2 pts) + 1 pt for specific outside evidence
· Analysis & Reasoning (2 pts): sourcing for 3+ docs (1 pt); demonstrate complexity (1 pt)
Score 5 Strategy
Use the 15-minute reading period to annotate every document for HAPP (Historical context, Audience, Purpose, Point of view)
Write your thesis FIRST — before contextualization — so you know your argument
Group documents into 2–3 thematic buckets; don't just summarize each one separately
For sourcing, explain HOW the author's position/purpose shapes what they say — not just who they are
Complexity: show a contradiction, multiple causes, or connect to a different time period/region
Model Opener

Although [counterargument from at least one document], [your thesis]: [specific claim about historical causation/change/comparison], because [category of analysis 1] and [category of analysis 2].

✍️15%
Section I · Part B

Short-Answer Question

SAQ · 40 min (3 of 4 SAQs)

Answer 3 of 4 short-answer questions, each with 3 sub-parts (a, b, c) worth 1 point each. No thesis required. Precise, evidence-based sentences only.

Scoring Criteria
· Part (a): usually describe or identify (1 pt for correct, specific historical claim)
· Part (b): usually explain how/why (1 pt for historical explanation with evidence)
· Part (c): usually explain or evaluate (1 pt for precise historical explanation with evidence)
Score 5 Strategy
Answer all three parts completely — do not skip any sub-part, even if uncertain
Each part needs ONE clear, accurate sentence with a specific historical example
Do NOT write a thesis or intro — jump directly into your answer
For part (c), choose the option you know the most specific evidence for
Use historian's language: 'This demonstrates that...' or 'This is significant because...'
Model Opener

(a) [Specific historical fact/event] demonstrates [historical claim]. (b) [Event/development] led to [outcome] because [historical mechanism]. (c) [Evidence] illustrates [historical significance] since [explanation].

📝20%
Section II · LEQ

Long Essay Question

LEQ · 40 min

Choose 1 of 3 prompts (each covering a different time period). Write an essay with thesis, contextualization, evidence, and historical reasoning skill (causation, CCOT, or comparison).

Scoring Criteria
· Thesis (1 pt): defensible claim that establishes a line of reasoning beyond restating the prompt
· Contextualization (1 pt): ~3–5 sentences of historical context preceding the period in question
· Evidence (2 pts): 1 pt for relevant specific examples; 2 pts if evidence supports the argument
· Analysis & Reasoning (2 pts): demonstrate the skill (CCOT/causation/comparison) + complexity point
Score 5 Strategy
Pick the prompt you have the MOST evidence for — not the one that sounds easiest at first glance
Write your thesis before your contextualization so you know your argument direction
Contextualization must be BEFORE the time period of the prompt — zoom out chronologically
Name at least 3 specific events, people, or developments to maximize evidence points
For complexity, explicitly address a COUNTERFACTUAL, EXCEPTION, or CONNECTION to another period
Model Opener

Although [acknowledging complexity], [your thesis]: between [date range], [historical argument about causation/change/similarity] because [reason 1] and [reason 2], demonstrating [broader historical significance].

🗺️40%
Section I · Part A

Multiple Choice — Source Analysis

Multiple Choice · 55 min

55 questions based on primary sources, secondary sources, maps, charts, and images. Each question set has 2–5 questions tied to the same source. Tests historical thinking skills: causation, CCOT, comparison, and contextualization.

Scoring Criteria
· Each correct answer: 1 point (no penalty for wrong answers)
· Questions grouped into sets of 2–5 around a single source
· Tests recognition of historical context, purpose, and argument of each source
Score 5 Strategy
Read the source header (author, date, context) before the source text — this is often the key to the correct answer
Eliminate answers that go beyond what the source can support — stay grounded in the document
For CCOT questions, look for what CHANGED and what STAYED THE SAME across the time frame
For comparison questions, look for specific similarities OR differences — not general statements
Manage time: spend no more than 60 seconds per question; flag and return to hard ones
Model Opener

When reading a source: (1) Who wrote it and when? (2) What is the author's PURPOSE? (3) What historical CONTEXT surrounds this document? (4) How might the author's POSITION shape their argument?

From Prof. Amara Osei

Expert Score 5 Tips

🎯

Master Contextualization First

Contextualization is the single most frequently missed point on both DBQs and LEQs. Practice writing a 3–5 sentence context paragraph for EVERY essay prompt you attempt. It should describe broader history BEFORE or AROUND the period — not during.

📜

HAPP Every Document

For each DBQ document, annotate: Historical context (when/where), Audience (who it was written for), Purpose (why it was written), and Point of view (how the author's position shapes their perspective). Earning 3 HAPP sourcing points requires explaining HOW these factors shape the document's argument.

⚖️

Write a Defensible Thesis — Not a Map

A thesis must take a position: argue a CATEGORY of analysis (economic, political, social) and claim WHY something happened, changed, or was similar. 'There were many causes of WWI' is NOT a thesis. 'Nationalism was the most significant cause of WWI because it directly motivated the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and inflamed mobilization' IS a thesis.

🔁

Practice CCOT Arguments Across All Four Periods

Continuity and Change over Time (CCOT) is tested on LEQs and SAQs. Practice writing one CCOT argument per week. For every topic, ask: what stayed the same? What changed? What caused those changes? Connect changes to specific events and developments.

🌍

Know Your Evidence Across ALL Regions

AP World History is not just European history. The exam tests Africa, Asia, the Americas, and the Middle East equally. Build an evidence bank with at least 3 specific examples per major theme (governance, economics, social hierarchy) for each of the four time periods.

📊

Use Outside Evidence in Your DBQ

Earning the outside evidence point (1 point) requires naming a specific historical fact NOT in the documents that supports your argument. Have 2–3 examples ready for common DBQ topics: Columbian Exchange, Atlantic slavery, imperialism, Cold War proxy conflicts.

Curated for Score 5

Practice Tests & Resources

🏛
OFFICIALFREE

CollegeBoard AP World History

Official CED, unit guides, sample DBQs, LEQs, SAQs, and scoring guidelines from the College Board.

Open resource
📂
OFFICIALFREE

Past AP World History FRQs (2017–2024)

Every past DBQ, LEQ, and SAQ with full scoring guidelines. Practice at least 3 full sets under timed conditions.

Open resource
🎥
HIGHLY RECOMMENDEDFREE

Heimler's History — AP World History

The #1 AP World History YouTube channel. Steve Heimler covers every unit with skill-based content and exam strategies. Essential viewing.

Open resource
📺
CONTENT REVIEWFREE

Crash Course World History

John Green's 42-episode series covering all major civilizations and developments. Excellent for narrative understanding of complex periods.

Open resource
🧠
EXAM STRATEGYFREE

Tom Richey AP World History

Focused AP exam strategy videos — DBQ writing, LEQ thesis construction, and CCOT argumentation from an experienced AP teacher.

Open resource
📚
COMPREHENSIVEFREE

Fiveable AP World History

Complete course review, unit summaries, DBQ/LEQ/SAQ practice, and live study sessions. Excellent for last-month exam prep.

Open resource
🎯
FREE PRACTICEFREE

Khan Academy AP World History

Free practice questions organized by AP unit. Good for testing content knowledge after watching video lectures.

Open resource
📖
TEXTBOOK

AMSCO AP World History: Modern

The most widely-used AP World History review book. Covers all four periods with practice questions and essay prompts.

Open resource
AI-Powered Progress

16-Week Score 5 Study Plan

Weeks 1–4

Phase 1: Foundation — Periods 1 & 2 (c. 1200–1750)

  • Read AMSCO Chapters 1–6 covering Periods 1 and 2
  • Watch all Heimler's History Period 1 and 2 videos
  • Daily: annotate one primary source using HAPP method
  • Write one SAQ per week under timed conditions (13 min each)
Weeks 5–8

Phase 2: Core Content — Periods 3 & 4 (c. 1750–Present)

  • Read AMSCO Chapters 7–12 covering Periods 3 and 4
  • Master the Industrial Revolution, Imperialism, and WWI/WWII content
  • Write one LEQ per week (40 min timed) on causation topics
  • Build your evidence bank: 3+ examples per theme per period
Weeks 9–12

Phase 3: Essay Mastery — DBQ and LEQ Strategies

  • Write 2 full DBQs using official past exam questions (timed: 60 min)
  • Practice HAPP sourcing for every document in each DBQ
  • Write 2 full LEQs per week — one CCOT, one comparison
  • Review scoring guidelines with Prof. Amara (SofAI chat) after each essay
Weeks 13–16

Phase 4: Full Exam Simulation

  • One full timed practice exam per week (all sections)
  • Review every wrong MC answer — identify which theme/period/skill was tested
  • Final DBQ: practice complexity point — add contradiction or broader context
  • Final review: build 'thesis starter' templates for each historical reasoning skill
Official & Curated

AP Resources Hub

🏛
Official Source

CollegeBoard AP World History

Official course description, exam format, sample DBQs, LEQs, SAQs, and full scoring guidelines.

Visit AP Central →
📚
The VR School

VRS AP Resources Center

All VR School AP course resources, study guides, and score submission guidance.

Open AP Resources →
⭐
Student Exemplar

AP Seminar Exemplar by Jiang

See the standard every VRS student aspires to — and the path to getting there.

View Exemplar →
Agentic AI Tutoring

Your Score 5 AI Tutors

Prof. Amara Osei is your AP World History expert — every DBQ, LEQ, SAQ rubric, and exam strategy. SofAIconnects History to every other subject you're studying.

📜 Help me write a thesis for a DBQ on the causes of WWI🔍 Explain HAPP sourcing and give me a practice document to analyze🌍 I struggle with contextualization — walk me through how to write it✍️ Give me a timed LEQ prompt on the Columbian Exchange and grade my response
🌟 Next Level

Your History Skills Are an Academic Superpower — Use Them in AP Seminar

AP World History builds exactly the skills AP Seminar demands: evidence-based argumentation, source analysis, and cross-cultural reasoning. See how Jiang combined these disciplines to build an outstanding portfolio recognized at the national level.

View AP Seminar ExemplarExplore AP Seminar →
🎓
🌍

Ready to Score a 5 in AP World History: Modern?

Enroll in the most comprehensive, AI-powered AP World History course available. WASC accredited. UC A-G Section A approved. Exam: May 2026.

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WASC Accredited · UC A-G Section A Approved · CollegeBoard Aligned · Exam: May 2026

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