Past Exams · Feature Tour

Sit a real exam. Get it scored like one.

Sit full AP free-response papers, plus SAT and ACT practice tests, under real, timed conditions. When you submit, Tutorioo scores your work against the official scoring guidelines and shows you exactly where every point was won or lost.

What you can sit

Real exams, not practice questions.

Whole papers, sat end to end under the clock, then scored the way a real exam is scored.

The free-response section, in full

AP free-response papers

Sit a full AP free-response paper and write out your responses exactly as you would in the exam room.

Every response is scored against the official scoring guidelines, with the points you earned shown question by question.

Start exam
Written paper

AP Biology — Free response

1h 30mon the clock
6 questions · 60 pointsmarked question by question

Real conditions. The timer starts the moment you begin.

AP free-response, SAT, and ACT all live in one place, so the student can move from one exam to the next without leaving Tutorioo.

Real exam conditions

A real clock.
A real paper.

No drip-fed hints, no peeking at the answers. You sit the paper the way you will sit the real one, so the result actually means something.

  • The clock is running

    A countdown starts the moment you begin and runs for the real length of the paper. When it hits zero, the paper is submitted for you.

  • The real paper on screen

    You read the actual paper and write your responses in your own words, exactly as you would on test day.

  • Timed section by section

    Multi-section tests run one timed section at a time. You cannot skip ahead, so the pressure is real.

  • One paper at a time

    You can only have one exam in progress, so there is nowhere to hide and nothing to distract you. Sit it, submit it, see how you did.

AP Biology

Free response · Past paper

72:00
Section 1Section 2Question 4 of 7

The paper

4Question 4

Explain how the structure of an artery is related to its function.

Page 6 of 14

Your answer

Arteries have thick muscular walls to

Saved automatically6 words

Scored properly

Scored against
the official scoring guidelines.

Not a vague grade out of nowhere. Tutorioo scores your work the way a reader would, against the same scoring guidelines, and tells you where each point went.

Free-response papers

AP free-response

Tutorioo reads what you actually wrote and scores it against the official scoring guidelines, one question at a time. You see the points you earned and exactly what a full-credit response needed.

  • Points awarded per question, against the official scoring guidelines
  • Written feedback on what was missing from each response
  • Spoken feedback you can listen to, question by question
Marking your paper
4Free response

Explain how the structure of an artery is related to its function.

Your answer

Arteries have thick muscular walls to withstand high pressure and a narrow lumen to keep the pressure high as blood is pumped from the heart.

0 of 4 pointsPlay feedback

Strong on the muscular wall and the high pressure. For the final point, link the elastic tissue to recoil that smooths out the surge in blood flow between heartbeats.

A report lands with the parent

After every exam, a clear report is generated for the parent, so the people supporting the student can see how the exam went without having to ask.

How it works

From past paper to scored response.

Four steps from picking a paper to seeing exactly where your points came from.

Pick a paper

Choose an AP free-response paper, or an SAT or ACT practice test, by subject and year. You can also ask Eva, the assistant, to find one for you.

Start the clock and sit it

The timer starts and you sit the whole paper under real conditions, writing or answering exactly as you would on test day.

Submit, or let time run out

Hand it in when you are done, or the paper is submitted automatically the moment the clock reaches zero.

See every point

Your work is scored against the official scoring guidelines, question by question, with written and spoken feedback, and a report goes to the parent.

Questions

Common questions.

Past Exams lets a student sit a full paper under real, timed exam conditions and then have it scored. You can sit AP free-response papers and SAT and ACT practice tests. Free-response papers are scored against the official scoring guidelines question by question, and multiple-choice tests are converted into a real scaled score, both with feedback on every question.

Stop guessing your score.
Sit the paper and find out.

Sit a real past paper, under the clock, and have it scored against the official scoring guidelines. It is the closest thing to the real exam, without the wait for score release.

No credit card required. Start in seconds.