Why AP Physics needs a different approach
AP Physics 1 and 2 are algebra-based; AP Physics C splits into Mechanics and Electricity & Magnetism, both calculus-based. Beyond the math level, the exam itself rewards something specific: free-response questions are graded against a published rubric that credits explicit reasoning and correct justification, not just a correct final number. A student can lose most of a question’s points with the right answer but no shown, explained work — and gain most of them with a wrong answer but sound reasoning shown clearly.
What the course covers
- Course-specific content aligned to AP Physics 1, 2, or C
- Free-response question practice using real released College Board FRQs
- Explicit rubric-style answer writing, not just problem-solving
- Multiple-choice section pacing and strategy
- Calculus-based mechanics and E&M for AP Physics C students
How the coaching works
Every session works from actual past AP exam free-response questions, since the rubric style is the whole game — a student who can solve the physics but not explain it in AP’s expected format still loses points. Practice includes timed multiple-choice sets and full free-response writing, reviewed against the same standard College Board graders use.
Who this is for
High school students anywhere in the world taking AP Physics 1, 2, or C, including students balancing AP alongside other national curricula. Runs as 1:1 or small-group sessions, fully online.