- How does AP Calc BC differ from AB?
- BC covers all AB topics plus sequences and series (Taylor and Maclaurin), parametric/polar/vector functions, and additional integration techniques like integration by parts and partial fractions. BC also gives you an AB subscore — a 4 or 5 BC student typically gets a 5 on the AB portion.
- What series topics show up the most?
- Convergence tests (especially ratio test, integral test, comparison test) plus Taylor series for common functions (sin, cos, e^x, 1/(1−x)) appear nearly every year. Know the Lagrange error bound for the polynomial approximation FRQ.
- What counts as a passing AP score?
- Most U.S. colleges grant credit for a 3 or higher. More selective schools (Ivies, top engineering programs) typically require a 4 or 5 for credit — check each college's AP credit policy.
- How is the AP curve calculated?
- The College Board uses a process called equating to make scores comparable across years. The raw-to-1-5 cutoffs shift slightly based on exam difficulty. Our cutoffs are based on the most recent publicly available scoring worksheets.
- When are AP scores released?
- AP scores are typically released in early July, accessible through your College Board account. The official scoring curves themselves are usually shared at AP teacher workshops in late summer — that's when we update our cutoffs.
- Why does this calculator say "official worksheet data"?
- For this subject, the weights and score bands are taken directly from a released College Board scoring worksheet that matches the exam structure. AP curves can still shift by administration, but the underlying cutoff table is not an invented estimate.
- Should I trust this over my teacher's prediction?
- Your teacher's gut estimate from years of seeing scored exams may be more accurate than any calculator. Use this tool to get a quick directional read, then ask your teacher to sanity-check borderline cases.