§ 1Big Picture
§ 2Vocabulary
Tap a card to flip. Use Mark Known to track your progress — it's saved in your browser. Search to filter.
§ 3Identifications
Each card opens to show Who / What / When / Where / Why it matters — the AP CED's "historical significance" rubric. Click a card to expand.
§ 4Timeline
Gold dots = exam-essential. Know dates within ± 5 years for any starred event.
§ 5Learning Objectives
Click a question to reveal a model answer. These are the College Board's essential questions for this period — if you can answer each cold, you own the unit.
§ 6Multiple-Choice Practice
AP Euro MCQs are always stimulus-based. Read the passage, parse it, then answer. Explanations appear after you choose.
§ 7SAQ Workbook
Rule of thumb: every SAQ part needs Answer + specific historical Evidence + Explanation of the connection (the "ACE" formula). Write the response first, then reveal the model.
§ 8DBQ Practice
Work through each document with the HIPP lens: Historical situation, Intended audience, Point of view, Purpose. Sourcing two documents is worth a point on the AP rubric.
§ 9LEQ Practice
The LEQ rubric rewards: defensible thesis, contextualization, 2+ specific pieces of evidence, analysis (not just description), and complexity (a counter-argument or nuance).
§ 10Primary Source Excerpts
The eight voices most likely to show up as MCQ stimuli or DBQ documents for this unit. Read slowly.
§ 11Common Pitfalls
The specific mistakes AP readers see over and over on Unit 7 questions.