Award-Winning AP Environmental Science Prep in Washington
Award-Winning AP Environmental Science Prep in Washington
Everything you need to crush the AP Environmental Science in Washington, DC. Live prep classes, practice tests, 1-on-1 expert tutoring, and AI-powered diagnostics.
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Instructors from
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
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AP Environmental Science Prep Classes
Short-term classLiveHigh School Biology Fundamentals
High School Biology is the study of the building blocks of life, how cells, systems, and processes interact to enable complex organisms to adapt and thrive. And just like living systems build from their foundations, your own biology knowledge builds concept by concept toward the complex skills you need for your labs and exams throughout the year. That’s why High School Biology Fundamentals is an integral component of your biology studies. Each week, an expert instructor will break down the key concepts that your current and upcoming biology lessons depend on, helping ensure that you’re ready for the challenges you encounter in your coursework and your foundations remain strong for midterm and final exams, cumulative assignments, and even future science classes.
Short-term classLiveAP Precalculus 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Precalculus exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the test day question formats, time limits, and calculator restrictions. By the end of the course, you’ll have the most critical knowledge, skills, and strategies top of mind and ready to apply on the AP Precalculus exam. From polynomials and complex numbers to logarithmic and trigonometric functions, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
Short-term classLiveAP Literature & Composition: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Literature & Composition exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks reviewing key skills and concepts from across the year and focusing on the concepts and strategies necessary to succeed on test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical content and preparation for the question types you’ll face on the exam. From fiction to poetry and multiple choice to free response questions, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
One-time classLiveAP Computer Science A Monthly Review
Ace your AP Computer Science A class _and_ the AP exam — without cramming or falling behind. Our AP Computer Science A Monthly Review sessions are designed to help you stay one step ahead. Each month, an expert instructor will guide you through a focused review of the unit you’ve just covered in class, helping you reinforce key programming skills, strengthen your problem-solving strategies, and build your personal study toolkit for May.
Short-term classLiveAP Microeconomics: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Microeconomics exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the question formats and time limits you’ll face on the exam. By the end of the course, you’ll be ready for multiple choice and free response questions on everything from supply and demand through market failures.
Semester classLiveAP Biology: 8-Week Exam Review
The AP Biology exam is coming up quickly, and this comprehensive, 8-session review course will make sure you’re fully prepared to succeed on test day. These expert-led sessions will provide a comprehensive review of all the skills and concepts you’ll need to succeed on the exam, along with strategic guidance on how to handle the question formats and time limits you’ll face on test day. By the end of the course, you’ll be ready for multiple choice and free response questions, analyzing experiments and graphics, about everything from cell structure to ecology.
Short-term classLiveHigh School Physics Fundamentals
Is your Physics grade a little too low? Want to improve your understanding of the most challenging concepts? Fundamentals of High School Physics is a live, interactive class designed for students wanting to improve their knowledge of formulas, definitions, and equations. In weekly sessions, guided by an expert instructor, you’ll gain a better understanding of the laws and applications of motion, forces, gravity, work, and energy, as well as light and sound waves.
Short-term classLiveThe Science of Growing
One of the most noticeable parts of growing up is, well, growing up. Your shoe size changes seemingly overnight, your shortest classmate can become your tallest over the summer, and your teeth are literally falling out of your head to make room for bigger ones. If you stop to think about it, being a kid is crazy: how does your body know it's time to spurt up a few inches? Where does the "stuff" come from to make more of you? And how does so much of it happen without you feeling it every minute of every day? Join pediatrician Dr. Tabitha Michaud to investigate the science of growing: how your cells communicate with one another to know when (and where) to grow; how your body turns food into new teeth, longer bones, and stronger muscles; and how your body tells you what's happening inside so that you can give it the nutrients and rest it needs.
Short-term classLiveFood, Fuel, and the Body
We all know that our bodies need food, and that feeling hungry is the body's way of making sure we never forget it. But past that, what really happens when we give our bodies food and which foods are best for which purposes? And how much of what we think we know is just clever marketing more than actual science: is breakfast really the most important meal of the day? Do carrots give you superhuman eyesight? Join pediatrician Dr. Tabitha Michaud to learn all about how our bodies turn food into fuel for energy, for growing, for bone and muscle development, for your immune system, and more. You'll see how food gets converted into nutrients from your mouth to your stomach to your bloodstream, discover which nutrients serve which purposes, and come away much more in tune with what your body is telling you it needs based on how you feel. Note: This course focuses on how the body works, not rules about eating. There is no “good vs bad food” language — just science, empowerment, and body literacy.
One-time classLiveAP Physics 1 Monthly Review
Ace your AP Physics 1 class _and_ the AP exam — without cramming or falling behind. Our AP Physics 1 Monthly Review sessions are designed to help you stay one step ahead. Each month, an expert instructor will guide you through a focused review of the unit you’ve just covered in class, helping you reinforce key concepts, connect ideas across the curriculum, and build your personal study toolkit for May.
Short-term classLiveAP Physics 1: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Physics 1 exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the question formats and time limits you’ll face on the exam. From position, velocity, and acceleration through torque and rotational motion, including study and pacing strategies, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
Short-term classLiveAP Calculus AB: 4-Week Exam Review
The AP Calculus AB exam covers a year’s worth of content in a single morning. So it pays to spend 4 weeks brushing up on concepts and getting the most important skills, formulas, and strategies top of mind to be ready for test day. That’s why this 4-week exam review class provides expert-led review of critical concepts along with strategic guidance on how to handle the test day question formats, time limits, and calculator restrictions. By the end of the course, you’ll have the most critical knowledge, skills, and strategies top of mind and ready to apply on the AP Calculus AB exam. From limits and integrals through differential equations and test-day pacing strategies, you’ll cover everything you need to conquer the test.
Top-Rated AP Environmental Science Prep Instructors in Washington
Eric's undergraduate research in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton trained him to read environmental systems the way APES multiple-choice distractors are designed to exploit — where a plau...
Education & Certificates
Princeton University
Bachelor in Arts
ACT Scores
Medical training at Baylor College of Medicine sharpens a specific skill that transfers directly to AP Environmental Science: diagnosing how biological, chemical, and human systems interact — the exac...
Education & Certificates
The University of Alabama
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
Baylor College of Medicine
Doctor of Medicine, Public Health
ACT Scores
Jake's Human Biology coursework at Stanford runs directly through the same ecological and health-policy intersections that APES tests hardest — the connections between human activity, environmental sy...
Education & Certificates
Stanford University
Current Undergrad, Human Biology
ACT Scores
Paul's double major in biology and public health at Brown gives him an unusual angle on APES prep: he coaches students to approach the exam's environmental policy and human-impact questions as a biolo...
Education & Certificates
Brown University
Bachelors (double major: Biology and Public Health)
ACT Scores
AP Environmental Science's free-response questions are notorious for requiring students to connect data sets, policy, and science concepts in a single answer — a skill that requires deliberate prep, n...
Education & Certificates
Duke University
Bachelor of Science in Neuroscience and Computer Science
ACT Scores
Chemistry training at UCLA gives Shawn a precise lens on the quantitative side of AP Environmental Science — the energy conversion calculations, pollution chemistry, and biogeochemical cycle problems ...
Education & Certificates
University of California Los Angeles
Master of Science, Chemistry
SAT Scores
APES free-response questions require students to apply concepts to unfamiliar scenarios quickly — the exam rewards students who understand systems thinking, not just memorized facts. Sharan teaches a ...
Education & Certificates
Cornell University
Bachelor of Science, Human Biology
ACT Scores
Todd's Biology degree from the University of Illinois and graduate training at the University of Chicago built the cross-disciplinary thinking that APES consistently rewards — the ability to trace how...
Education & Certificates
University of Chicago
Master of Social Work, Social Work
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General
ACT Scores
Satya's Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering training at Princeton means he approaches APES content — energy systems, biogeochemical cycles, pollution dynamics — through the same quantitative lens th...
Education & Certificates
Princeton University
Bachelor of Science, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
ACT Scores
Patricia's dual degree in Environmental Science from Washington University in St. Louis means she can diagnose exactly which content gaps — nutrient cycles, energy flow, environmental policy — are cos...
Education & Certificates
Washington University in St. Louis
Bachelor in Arts
SAT Scores
Frequently Asked Questions
Students often struggle most with the quantitative sections—particularly energy flow calculations, population growth models, and water/nutrient cycle stoichiometry. The FRQ section also trips up many students because it requires synthesizing concepts across multiple units (like connecting atmospheric chemistry to acid rain impacts). Additionally, the distinction between biotic and abiotic factors in ecosystem dynamics, and understanding feedback loops in Earth systems, tends to be conceptually difficult without targeted explanation.
The exam has two sections: 80 multiple-choice questions (90 minutes) and 3 free-response questions (90 minutes). For the MC section, pace yourself at roughly 1 minute per question and flag questions involving calculations or complex diagrams to revisit. For FRQs, allocate 30 minutes per question and structure your answer clearly—define terms, show your work for calculations, and explicitly connect your answer to environmental principles. Many students lose points by not explaining the "why" behind their answers, especially in questions about human impacts or policy solutions.
Focus on understanding the underlying concepts before memorizing formulas—for example, knowing that NPP (Net Primary Productivity) = GPP minus respiration helps you interpret what the numbers mean, not just plug them in. Practice working through calculation-heavy topics like doubling time, carrying capacity, and bioaccumulation repeatedly with different scenarios. Many students benefit from creating a reference sheet of common formulas and their real-world applications, then practicing problems without looking at it to build fluency and confidence under test conditions.
The key is practicing under timed conditions with actual past FRQs and learning to structure your responses clearly. Strong FRQ answers identify the environmental concept being tested, define relevant terms, provide specific examples (like naming actual pollutants or ecosystems), and explain the cause-and-effect relationship. Many students rush through the writing portion; instead, spend the first few minutes outlining your answer, then write in complete sentences that directly address the prompt. Reviewing scoring rubrics alongside sample responses helps you understand exactly what exam readers are looking for.
You'll encounter graphs showing population trends, temperature anomalies, pollution levels, and resource consumption—and you need to extract meaning quickly. Practice identifying axes labels, units, and trends (linear vs. exponential growth, correlation vs. causation). Many students misread axes or confuse correlation with causation, especially in questions about climate data or toxicology studies. Spend time analyzing real datasets from sources like NOAA or EPA reports to build comfort with environmental data, and always ask yourself: "What does this pattern tell me about the environmental system, and what are the limitations of this data?"
The exam rewards students who see how units relate—for instance, understanding how energy flow in ecosystems (Unit 1) connects to human agriculture and food production (Unit 5), or how atmospheric chemistry (Unit 7) drives both climate change and ozone depletion. Create concept maps linking topics like nutrient cycles, human impacts, and policy responses. When studying, ask yourself questions like: "How would increased CO₂ affect photosynthesis rates and ecosystem productivity?" or "How do population dynamics influence resource consumption?" This synthesis thinking is what separates students scoring 4s and 5s from those scoring 2s and 3s.
Practice full-length exams under realistic conditions (2.5 hours, no breaks) to build stamina and familiarity with the pace—this reduces anxiety on test day. For the MC section, if you're stuck on a question after 1.5 minutes, mark it and move on; you can return if time allows. During FRQs, read all three prompts first and start with the one you feel most confident about to build momentum. Deep breathing and positive self-talk matter too—remind yourself that you've practiced these concepts and that it's okay not to know every detail; partial credit is available for showing your reasoning.
Score improvement depends on your starting point and effort level. Students who are struggling with foundational concepts (scoring 1-2) typically see the biggest gains—often 1-2 full points—when they get targeted help identifying knowledge gaps and building systematic study habits. Students scoring 3s can often reach 4s by strengthening FRQ writing and quantitative problem-solving through practice. The national average is around a 2.5, so reaching a 3 or 4 puts you ahead of most test-takers. Realistic improvement requires consistent practice with past exams, honest assessment of weak areas, and applying feedback to future attempts.
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