AP resources are designed to support all students and teachers—with daily instruction, practice, and feedback to help cover and connect content and skills—in any learning environment.
AP Course Pacing Guide: January–April 2021
Download Guide (.pdf/169.38 KB)
The new course pacing guide, designed for classrooms that have only completed approximately 25% of typical course content by January, can help students develop their knowledge and skills by May. This guide can help you assign the AP Daily videos and topic questions necessary for student-led learning each week, using the reports generated by these topic questions to focus your limited, direct class time on the areas where students need more help. The guide shows how students can make up the pace by completing approximately 30 minutes of AP Daily videos and topic questions per night, in lieu of or in addition to teacher-led learning and other class assignments.
If your students are ahead of this pace, you’ll be able to incorporate additional days or weeks to spend more time on challenging topics, practice course skills, or begin reviewing for the exam.
Watch how you can use these pacing guides in this short video.
AP Daily
Sign in to AP Classroom to access AP Daily.
- Made for any learning environment, AP teachers can assign these short videos on every topic and skill as homework alongside topic questions, warm-ups, lectures, reviews, and more.
- AP students can also access videos on their own for additional support.
- Videos for units 1–7 are available now in AP Classroom, on your homepage under the unit tabs. We’ll release more units throughout the year.
AP Daily Release Dates for Psychology: 9 Units
Unit | Release Date |
---|---|
Unit 1 |
September 1, 2020 |
Unit 2 |
September 22, 2020 |
Unit 3 |
October 8, 2020 |
Unit 4 |
October 22, 2020 |
Unit 5 |
November 10, 2020 |
Unit 6 |
December 8, 2020 |
Unit 7 |
January 11, 2021 |
Unit 8 |
February 10, 2021 |
Unit 9 |
March 3, 2021 |
AP Daily Instructors
Expert AP teachers across the country can support your course virtually:
- Lead teacher: Joseph Swope, Northwest High School, Rockville, Md.
- Natasha Alston, Mountain Pointe High School, Phoenix, Ariz.
- Annette Nielsen, Woods Cross High School, Woods Cross, Utah
- Karl Honma, Saint Mark's High School, Wilmington, Del.
- Lara Bruner, Desert Vista High School, Phoenix, Ariz.
- Marisa Del Savio, Walt Whitman High School, Bethesda, Md.
- Mark Minnick, Southside High School, Fort Smith, Ark.
Higher Education Faculty Lecturers
Supplement your instruction with 30-minute videos on each unit hosted by college or university professors. Guest lecturers include:
- Barney Beins, Ithaca College
- Regan Gurung, Oregon State University
- Jane Halonen, University of West Florida
- Chris Jones-Cage, College of the Desert
- David Kreiner, University of Central Missouri
- Loretta McGregor, Arkansas State University
- Jennifer Stevens, College of William and Mary
- Jason Young, CUNY: Hunter College
The Faculty Lectures for Units 1–3 are available on the AP Classroom homepage, on your course tab, as well as YouTube (view Unit 1, Unit 2, and Unit 3).
AP Classroom
Sign in to AP Classroom and explore these resources:
- AP Daily videos are short, searchable instructional segments you can:
- Assign to students before or after class to maximize time for discussion.
- Assign alongside topic questions to address misunderstandings.
- Encourage students to take advantage of on their own, on mobile devices or computers.
- Track to see which students are watching each video in each class.
- Topic questions are formative questions to check student understanding as you teach. Assign topic questions to reveal student misunderstandings and target your lessons.
- Progress checks help you gauge student knowledge and skills for each unit through:
- multiple-choice questions with rationales explaining correct and incorrect answers, and
- free-response questions with scoring guides to help you evaluate student work.
- The progress dashboard highlights progress for every student and class across AP units.
- The question bank is a searchable database of real AP questions. You can:
- find topic questions and practice exam questions, indexed by content and skills.
- search for any question, passage, or stimulus by text or keyword.
- create custom quizzes that can be assigned online or on paper.
Learn how to get started in AP Classroom.
AP Community
Sign in to the AP Psychology Community.
- Share real-time strategies, ask questions, and collaborate with teachers worldwide.
- Search, add, and rate teacher resources with your peers in the resource library.
- Daily or weekly digests help you keep up with your community, wherever you are. Select all discussions or just the topics and discussion threads you choose to follow. You can also reply to discussion posts through email.
Learn more about the AP Community.
Additional Resources for AP Psychology
Curriculum Modules
Special Focus Materials
From Your AP Colleagues
Pedagogy
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Easy-to-Grade Writing Assignments for AP Psychology
Short but effective writing activities. -
Incorporating Mini-Research Projects into an Introductory Psychology Course
The benefits of assigning short research projects. -
How the Grinch Stole Psychology Class
An activity focused on personality theory. -
Rubrics and Writing: Demystifying Essays in AP Psychology
Use actual AP rubrics to grade student essays.