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4 min readโขjune 18, 2024
Fatima Raja
Fatima Raja
The free-response section of the CompGov exam makes up 50% of your exam score. So, yeah, that means it's a good idea to do well on the FRQ section if you want to score well. Which, like, why wouldn't you? ๐ค
Keep reading to learn how to ace the FRQ section!ย
You might be wondering what the FRQ section looks like, especially because every AP exam is slightly different. ๐คฎ
The FRQ section of the CompGov exam has 4 questions, and each one of them is a different style of question. Here are the types of questions:
What makes a good FRQ response? What will get you/lose you a point? ๐ค You can figure all of that out by looking at past student responses. Doing this will help you learn how pretty much game the system.
If you've played a sport ๐๐ฝโโ๏ธ or ever had any kind of hobby, you know that you may not have all the skills to do well at first, but you get better at it with practice. FRQs work pretty much the same way: you need to practice writing them to get good at writing them.
The good thing is that you can accessย past exam FRQs until 1999. That said, you should start practicing with the most recent prompts because they'll be the most similar to what will show up on your test.
I'll admit that practicing FRQs isn't my first choice of a fun activity to do. So, here are a couple of writing games you can do to make practicing slightly less boring.
Get a bunch of popsicle sticks or slips of paper and put a bunch of different political concepts/institutions, important vocab words, and the required countries. Make sure that you separate these things by color (ex. make the countries blue, the vocab words purple...) so you can tell them apart.
Draw a country, an important vocab term, and a concept out of the jar. Then, write about them. Explain how that term exists in the country you drew and what it means.
๐จ This exercise will help you know what gaps you have in your CompGov knowledge and allow you to practice writing about the concepts you're learning.
Have a few friends or classmates make up their CompGov FRQ prompts. This will work better if they're also taking the class or have taken it in the past (because they'll hopefully know what they're talking about ๐).
Try this one when there isn't a pandemic happening.
Then, ball up your piece of paper and throw your snowball across the room (or at a friend ๐). Everyone should pick up a snowball for themselves and reply to the prompt they picked up.
If you want, you can have another mini snowball fight and have different people grade the responses. Make sure everyone writes their name on their response, so they can feedback on what they wrote.
If you decide that you don't want to practice FRQs from 1999 because they're outdated and you run out of prompts to practice with, you can change up how they're structured.
Just choose a prompt, and draw a different country out of a hat ๐ฉ. Then, respond to the prompt as if it's about the country you drew.
Half of your CompGov score consists of the FRQs you write, so knowing how to do well in this section will help you ace the exam. Connecting the course content to the short answers you have to write may be a bit difficult at first, but you'll get the hang of it with some practice.
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