An AI tutor built for AP.
AP English Language, AP Calculus, AP Chemistry, AP Biology, AP Physics, AP US History and more. Edapt rebuilds every AP topic to match how you learn and scores your practice at College Board level. Free for everyone, no card.
AP subjects Edapt covers
AP English Language and Composition
Rhetorical analysis, argument and synthesis essays, with claim-evidence-commentary structure and source integration modelled to your learning style.
AP Calculus AB and BC
Limits, derivatives, integrals and series, with worked solutions adapted to your VARK profile and free-response practice at College Board standard.
AP Chemistry
Atomic structure, bonding, kinetics, equilibrium and electrochemistry, with worked calculations and diagram-based revision for every unit.
AP Biology
Cells, genetics, evolution, ecology and physiology, with concept maps for visual learners and structured notes for reading-led students.
AP Physics 1, 2 and C
Kinematics, dynamics, waves, electricity and magnetism, with narrated problem walkthroughs and College Board free-response practice.
AP United States History
Document-based questions, long essay and short-answer responses, with paragraph scaffolds and model score-5 responses across every period.
Why AP students need an adaptive tutor
AP exams test both content knowledge and the ability to apply it quickly under exam conditions. The free-response sections in particular reward precision, and many students lose points not because they do not know the material but because they do not know how to present an argument or calculation in the way College Board expects.
Edapt builds lessons around the AP curriculum framework for your subject, scores your free-response and essay practice at the 1-to-5 scale and tells you exactly what a score of 5 requires. Research by Roediger and Karpicke on active recall shows that practising retrieval builds stronger memory than re-reading, which is why Edapt structures every lesson around doing, not just reviewing.
Marked like an assessor, not a chatbot
Illustrative example. Generic AI gives everyone the same note. Edapt marks against College Board (the United States organisation that designs and scores AP exams) criteria.
Solid essay. Consider adding more analysis and strengthening your conclusion.
The proliferation of algorithmic content feeds a confirmation bias that erodes the capacity for nuanced civic discourse, a trend with measurable consequences for democratic participation.
- Thesis and line of reasoning
- 1 of 1
- Evidence and commentary
- 3 of 4
- Sophistication of argument
- 0 of 1
- The sophistication point is within reach. You have a clear thesis and strong evidence, though a score of 5 requires you to either qualify your argument by acknowledging a genuine counter-claim, or to place your argument in a broader context such as the historical relationship between media and civic participation.
- For the evidence and commentary criterion, push from 3 to 4 by explaining the specific mechanism behind your claim, not just that confirmation bias exists but how the algorithm rewards engagement, which reinforces existing beliefs, which reduces exposure to contrary evidence.
AP AI tutor: common questions
Does Edapt follow the current College Board AP curriculum frameworks?
Yes. Set your AP subject and Edapt pitches every lesson to the current College Board curriculum framework, using the right units, essential questions and the question types that appear on the AP exam.
Can Edapt help with the free-response and essay sections specifically?
Yes. The free-response sections are where most students can gain or lose the most points. Paste or type your response and Edapt will score it using the College Board scoring guidelines, show you the rubric row by row and explain what a score of 5 requires.
How does the 1-to-5 scoring feedback work?
Edapt maps your practice response to the College Board scoring guidelines for that question type, gives you an overall score and a breakdown by criterion, and explains in plain language what each criterion needs for full marks. It is a study tool, not an official College Board score.
Is the AP tutor free to use?
Yes, completely. Every tool on Edapt is free for every student. No subscription and no catch.
Revise your next AP topic the way you actually learn.
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