What is the AP Biology Exam?
The AP Biology Exam consists of two parts
- Multiple choice and Grid Ins section
- Counts for 50% of the exam grade
- Composed of 63 multiple choice questions and 6 Grid In questions which may include mathematical manipulation and, or calculations.
- Free response section
- Counts for the remaining 50% of the exam grade
- Composed of two subsections
- The first subsection consists of a few multi-part free response questions, one of which connects to the lab experience
- The second subsection consists of several single-part free response questions
- There are a total of two long free-response questions and six shorter free-response questions
Tips for Completing the Multiple Choice Section:
- Read each answer choice carefully. First, try to eliminate answer choices that are clearly wrong.
- Notice that more than one answer choice may be relevant to the topic, but always select the most appropriate.
- Since there is no penalty for incorrect answers, make educated guesses when the answer is not clear.
- Bring several number 2 pencils with very clean erasers. Extraneous markings on the scantron form can interfere with the accuracy of the scanning equipment.
- Because of the emphasis on quantitative skills, simple (not scientific and not graphing) calculators may be used during the exam.
Tips for Completing the Free Response Section:
- Read each question thoroughly.
- Pay close attention to the verbs in the questions. Identify if you are supposed to list, describe, or explain something and then focus writing the essay around that action.
- Identify the various components of the question.
- Divide questions that have multiple parts into separate sections even if not specifically asked for in the question because it makes the reading of the essay easier and it is easier to see how you addressed each section in your response.
- Pay attention to words like “and” and “or”. Only answer as many sections or give as many examples as directed to provide.
- Do not provide extra examples when a set number is requested.
- If no limit on example numbers is provided, feel free to elaborate with additional examples
- If a question asks you to explain three of four terms, only explain three.
- Any information you give on a fourth term will not be awarded points and will only be consuming valuable time.
- Write in blue or black pen.
- Pencil is hard to read. Colored ink is distracting and not as clear to the reader. Make sure your ink does not bleed through the back of the page.
- Use the best and clearest handwriting that you can.
- Readers don’t want to have to reread a section of a response several times to prevent missing some important comments.
- Points are given for valid information with explanations.
- Elaborate on your responses with explanations and examples. Often single related words or unexplained references will not be given any points.
- Bulleted answers and lists will not be awarded points.
- However, refrain from writing verbose essays that reword the same comment several times. All of the detailed, well-explained points will be awarded for information in the body of a traditional essay.
- Keep the responses focused
- If a question or part of a question asks you to focus on a specific component of a topic, stay focused on that component. You will not receive points for additional information on the concept that are not requested in the question.
- Understanding science process skills is important.
- For graphs, provide titles and clearly defined and labeled axes.
- For experimental designs, describe plausible examples with clearly noted controls and experimental groups, standard conditions, replication, and data collection and analysis
BIG IDEAS!
Big Idea #1: The process of evolution drives the diversity and unity of life
KEY TERMS for this section:
- Adaptation
- Adaptive radiation
- Allele
- Allopatric speciation
- Analogous structures
- Antibiotic resistance
- Artificial selection
- Bottleneck effect
- Cladograms
- Clade
- Common ancestor
- Convergent evolution
- Directional selection
- Disruptive selection
- Divergent evolution
- Emigration
- Evolution
- Fertility
- Founder effect
- Gene flow
- Gene pool
- Genetic drift
- Homologous structure
- Hybrid
- Immigration
- Isolation types
- Limited resources
- Mutation
- Natural selection
- Outgroup
- Phenotype
- Phylogenetic tree
- Population
- Protobiont
- Random mating
- Reproductive isolation
- Serial endosymbiosis
- Sexual selection
- Speciation
- Species
- Stabilizing selection
- Sterility
- Sympatric speciation
- Variation
- Vestigial organs
- Viability
Enduring Understanding 1.A: Change in the genetic makeup of a population over time is evolution
- What are the processes by which variation occurs in a given population?
- How do the effects of genetic drift vary based upon population size?
- What are the different types of selection and how does each drive evolution?
- How do you determine the frequency of a dominant allele if the frequency of a recessive allele is given?
- How do you determine the frequency of a recessive allele if the percentage of the population with the recessive phenotype is given?
- How do you calculate the percentage of the population with a recessive allele if the percentage of the population expressing the dominant allele is given?
- How do you differentiate between the frequency of an allele and the frequency of a genotype?
- How do you interpret a graph showing how evolution favors different phenotypes?
- What are the changes in a gene pool as a result of emigration and immigration?
- What are the pressures that can increase or decrease the fitness of a particular population?
Enduring Understanding 1.B: Organisms are linked by lines of descent from common ancestry
- How do you determine relative relatedness between organisms as represented by a cladogram?
- How do you draw a cladogram, if you are given names of organisms/groups and specific characteristics?
- How do youuse data to determine what organisms shared a more common ancestor?
- What are the specific cellular similarities between related eukaryotes?
Enduring Understanding 1.C: Life continues to evolve within a changing environment
- What is the difference between allopatric and sympatric speciation?
- How can polyploidy lead to a new species in plants?
- What can cause extinction of a species?
- What are the prezygotic and postzygotic mechanisms of reproductive isolation? Make sure
you know how to correctly use the terms hybrid, viability, sterility, and fertility when explaining postzygotic mechanisms of isolation.
Enduring Understanding 1.D: The origin of living systems is explained by natural processes
- What is the theory of serial endosymbiosis?
- What are the potential heterotrophic and autotrophic eukaryotic ancestors?
- What are the characteristics of the first living cell?
- How do you properly use taxonomy when describing relatedness of organisms within phylogenetic trees and cladograms?
- What are the similarities and the differences among the three domains?
Big idea #2: Biological systems utilize free energy and molecular building blocks to grow, to reproduce and to maintain dynamic homeostasis
KEY TERMS for this section:
- Abiotic
- Active transport
- Adaptive radiation
- Anabolic reactions
- Apomixis
- Asexual reproduction
- ATP
- ATP synthase
- Binary fission
- Biotic
- Budding
- Calvin cycle
- Catabolic reactions
- Chemiosmosis
- Chloroplast
- Community
- Competitive inhibitor
- Concentration gradient
- Consumers
- Cooperativity
- Courtship behavior
- Cryptic coloration
- Cuticle
- Cyclic photophosphorylation
- Cytoskeleton
- Diffusion
- Divergent evolution
- Ecosystem
- Endergonic reactions
- Energy coupling
- Enthalpy
- Entropy
- Exergonic reactions
- Facilitated diffusion
- Feedback inhibition
- Fermentation
- G proteins
- Glycolysis
- Golgi apparatus
- Homeostasis
- Hypertonic
- Hypotonic
- Isotonic
- Krebs cycle
- Lysosome
- Metabolism
- Meiosis
- Mitochondrion
- Mitosis
- Negative feedback
- Net primary productivity
- Noncyclic photophosphorylation
- Nucleus
- Osmoconformer
- Osmoregulator
- Osmosis
- Passive transport
- Periodic transport
- Periodic disturbances
- Pheromones
- Photosynthesis
- Phylogeny
- Population
- Positive feedback
- Primary succession
- Producers
- Regeneration
- Ribosome
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum
- Rubisco
- Secondary succession
- Sexual reproduction
- Sexual selection
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- Speciation
- Transcription factors
- Trophic levels
- Vegetative reproduction
Enduring Understanding 2.A: Growth, reproduction and maintenance of the organization of living systems require free energy and matter
- How does energy move through and is transformed in biological systems?
- What is the difference between catabolic reactions and anabolic reactions?
- What are the processes of anaerobic respiration, aerobic respiration, and photosynthesis?
- What are the electron acceptors in the different energy capturing processes?
- Compare and contrastanaerobic and aerobic respiration
- What is chemiosmosis?
- What are the specific cellularstructures that allow organisms to maximize the exchange of materials with the environment (maximize surface area to volume ratio)?
- What are the different metabolic and reproductive strategies plants and animals use to maximize free energy (endothermic vs. exothermic, perennial vs. biennial vs. annual)?
- What are the different mechanisms used by organisms to capture and store free energy?
- What are the properties of water that impact living systems?
Enduring Understanding 2.B: Growth, reproduction and dynamic homeostasis require that cells create and maintain internal environments that are different from their external environments
- What is the structure of the plasma membrane?
- Why is the plasma membrane selectively permeable?
- How does cellular energy or energy from concentration gradients drive molecular movement across the membranes?
- What are the characteristics of the following transport processes: diffusion, passive transport, facilitated diffusion, osmosis, active transport, and endocytosis?
- What are the mechanisms and purposes of phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and receptor-mediated endocytosis?
- What is the eukaryotic endomembrane system (explain structure and function)?
- What are the structure and function of the following organelles: nucleus, lysosome, vacuole, vesicle, mitochondrion, chloroplast, ribosome, flagella, centriole, and cilia?
- What are the cellular differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes?
Enduring Understanding 2.C: Organisms use feedback mechanisms to regulate growth and reproduction, and to maintain dynamic homeostasis
- What is homeostasis and how is it maintained?
- What are positive and negative feedback systems? Give at least one example of each.
- What isphotoperiodism?
- What is the difference between taxis and kinesis and can you design an experiment to test a hypothesis related to types of movement?
- What are circadian rhythms?
- How do biological clocks function in mammals?
Enduring Understanding 2.D: Growth and dynamic homeostasis of a biological system are influenced by changes in the system’s environment
- What are abiotic and biotic factors and how do they affect a community structure?
- How does energy move through trophic levels?
- How much energy is available to producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers?
- What are food chains and food webs?
- What are primary and secondary successions?
- What are the interspecific relationships such as interspecific competition, herbivory, predation, commensalism, and mutualism?
- How do organisms exchange nutrients and waste with their environment? Give specific examples
- How is the mammalian immune system adapted to maintain homeostasis?
Enduring Understanding 2.E: Many biological processes involved in growth, reproduction and dynamic homeostasis include temporal regulation and coordination
- What are the regulatory mechanisms that are crucial in cell differentiation?
- How do homeotic genes control the pattern of body formation?
- What is embryonic induction?
- What plant hormones affect (and how) cell elongation, seed germination, fruit maturation, and apoptosis?
- How do hibernation and estivation conserve energy?
Big idea #3: Living systems store, retrieve, transmit, and respond to information essential to life processes
KEY TERMS for this section
- Allele
- Alternative splicing
- Aneuploidy
- Cell plate
- Centromere
- Cleavage furrow
- Codominance
- Conjugation
- Crossing over
- Cytokinesis
- DNA
- DNA ligase
- DNA methylation
- DNA polymerase
- DNA replication
- Epistasis
- Euchromatin
- Genotype
- Helicase
- Hemizygous
- Heterochromatin
- Heterozygous
- Homologous chromosomes
- Homozygous
- Incomplete dominance
- Independent assortment
- Inducible operon
- Kinetochore
- Lagging strand
- Leading strand
- Linked traits
- Lysogenic cycle
- Lytic cycle
- Meiosis
- Mendelian genetics
- Mitosis
- Nondisjunction
- Nucleotide
- Operons
- Phenotype
- Pilus
- Polygenic inheritance
- Polyploidy
- Purine
- Pyrimidine
- Repressible operon
- RNA
- Sex-linked traits
- Splicing
- Synapsis
- Telomere
- Transduction
- Transformation
Enduring Understanding 3.A: Heritable information provides for continuity of life
- What were the experiments that contributed to the understanding of the structure and function of DNA?
- What is the structure of DNA?
- How does DNA replicate and what are the enzymes involved in replication?
- What are the similarities and the differences of the leading and the lagging strands of DNA during DNA replication?
- What is the cell cycle and what are its stages?
- Compare and contrast the process of cytokinesis in plant and animal cells
- What are the cellular events in each stage of mitosis?
- What are the cellular events in each stage of meiosis?
- What are the similarities and the differences of mitosis and meiosis?
- How does synapsis and crossing over occur in meiosis?
- How does crossing over and independent assortment contribute to variation?
- How are traits inherited?
- Explain the following: Mendelian genetics, incomplete dominance, codominance, multiple alleles, polygenic inheritance, epistasis, sex-linked traits, and linked traits
Enduring Understanding 3.B: Expression of genetic information involves cellular and molecular mechanisms
- What is the structure of a bacterial operon?
- What is the difference between an inducible and a repressible operon?
- How does chromatin compaction affect gene activity in eukaryotes?
- How does DNA methylation and histone acetylation affect gene activity in eukaryotes?
- How is the RNA transcript altered to mRNA in eukaryotes?
- How does alternative splicing occur in eukaryotes?
- How can alternative splicing and end cap removal be used to regulate gene activity in eukaryotes?
- How can transcription factors and control regions affect gene activity in eukaryotes?
- Compare and contrast local and long distance regulatory mechanisms
- What are autocrine, paracrine, and synaptic signaling?
- Compare and contrast protein hormones and steroid hormones
Enduring Understanding 3.C: The processing of genetic information is imperfect and is a source of genetic variation
- How can mutation occur?
- What is the difference between point mutations and chromosomal mutations?
- What are substitutions, insertion, and deletions (point mutations)?
- How does nondisjunction occur?
- What is the difference between aneuploidy and polyploidy?
- What are deletions, inversions, and translocations (chromosomal mutations)?
- How does meiosis provide genetic variation?
- How does random fertilization provide genetic variation?
- How does transformation provide genetic variation?
- How does conjugation provide genetic variation?
- How does transduction provide genetic variation?
- What is the structure of the viral genome?
- How are the lysogenic and the lytic cycles of a virus different?
Enduring Understanding 3.D: Cells communicate by generating, transmitting and receiving chemical signals
- What is the difference between a secretory cell and a target cell?
- What are the three ways that cells can communicate?
- Provide an example for each of the mechanisms of cell communication
- How do plants and animals communicate differently?
- What is a second messenger pathway (signal cascade)?
Enduring Understanding 3.E: Transmission of information results in changes within and between biological systems
- What is a homeotic gene and how does it function?
- What is the mechanism of seed germination?
- How do genetic mutations affect development?
- What is apoptosis and what is its purpose in normal and abnormal development?
- How are short day and long day plants different?
- What is phototropism and how does it work?
- What is the role of melatonin in sleep wake cycles?
- What is the function of pheromones?
- What is a signal transduction pathway? Give an example
Big idea#4: Biological systems interact, and these systems and their interactions possess complex properties.
KEY TERMS for this section
- Active site
- Alimentary canal
- Allosteric regulation
- Alveoli
- Amino acid
- Atom
- Atomic mass
- Atomic number
- Atrium
- Carbohydrates
- Cell wall
- Centriole
- Cholesterol
- Chloroplast
- Coenzymes
- Cofactors
- Competitive inhibition
- Covalent bond
- DNA
- Disaccharides
- Electrons
- Feedback inhibition
- Fatty acid
- Flame cell
- Glycolipids
- Golgi apparatus
- Heterozygous
- Homozygous
- Hormone
- Hydrogen bond
- Hydrophilic
- Hydrophobic
- Invasive species
- Ionic bond
- Isotope
- Keystone species
- Kidney
- Lysosome
- Malpighian tubule
- Mitochondrion
- Monosaccharides
- Nephridia
- Neuron
- Neurotransmitter
- Neutrons
- Niche
- Nonpolar covalent bond
- Nucleic acid
- Nucleolus
- Nucleotide
- Nucleus
- Organ
- Organelle
- Peptide bond
- Phagocytosis
- Phospholipid
- Plasma membrane
- Polar covalent bond
- Polysaccharides
- Positive feedback
- Protons
- Purine
- Pyrimidine
- RNA
- Radioactive isotopes
- Ribosome
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- Steroid
- Substrate
- Triglyceride
- Valence electrons
- Van der Waal interaction
- Ventricle
Enduring Understanding 4.A: Interactions within biological systems lead to complex properties
- What is the structure of an atom?
- Compare and contrast covalent and ionic bonds
- What are hydrogen bonds and why are they important?
- What are Van der Waal interactions?
- What are the structure and function of carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids?
- What are the structure and function of all cell organelles?
- How are prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells different and alike?
- How are the mechanisms for gene regulation in prokaryotic cells different and alike?
- What are positive and negative feedbacks? (Give an example of each)
- How does the nervous system function to maintain homeostasis?
- How does the endocrine system function to maintain homeostasis?
- How do populations interact within a community?
- What are the differences between a food chain and a food web?
- How is energy passed through the trophic levels?
Enduring Understanding 4.B: Competition and cooperation are important aspects of biological systems