Grading in AP Physics was one of my biggest initial challenges when I began teaching the course. I got ideas from a lot of AP teachers, but I tried to come up with my own system based on their feedback.

I try to give my students only AP style quizzes and tests. They between using released questions, old AP Physics B questions, and questions I wrote. I get asked a lot how to grade these. Basically, my rationale is that a student’s test average should be indicative of their performance on the AP national exam.

Here is the data I know: when grading AP Physics 1 and 2, the 2015 and 2016 IPE have composite score ranges. However this is from the released exams only, and I feel these score ranges are fairly low compared to the operational exam.

AP Physics 1:

Score2015 Range2016 Range
551-8057-80
439-5043-56
329-3831-42
220-2820-30
10-190-19

AP Physics 2:

Score2015 Range2016 Range
559-8054-80
449-5844-53
334-4830-43
219-3318-29
10-180-17

As you see, this does vary from year to year and exam to exam. I err on the high side. I extrapolate their grades from a graph, correlating an A to a 5, B to a 4, and so on. However, note that this is for their summative assessments only – students can still earn a higher grade from things like homework, labs, etc.

When looking online, I found several websites with their own score calculator. Albert.io is one resource that has this. It’s hard to know the accuracy of these resources, but it is good to get a general idea. However, I love Albert.io’s practice questions – check out my review of them here.

When it comes to actually grading tests, I try my best to score similar to the AP exam – no “just because you wrote something” points and MC/FRQ equally weighted on tests. I feel that this gives students realistic expectations.