AP Psych FRQ format?

<p>For the essays in AP psych, are the parts of the essays supposed to be separated by 'a' and 'b' and 'c', etc. or is it supposed to be one big essay that answers the whole question? Kaplan broke it up into little paragraphs according to parts but barrons wrote a single essay. </p>

<p>Which way is correct? Are both correct? Hmmmmm.</p>

<p>You can write it both ways. If you look at student-sample exams on APcentral, you’ll see that some students write A)blablhaldfsj, B)fldksjf, C)dlfkjakl, and some students just write one big essay. Also, some students separate their responses to A, B, and C by indentions, but not by writing the letters.</p>

<p>It’s personal preference I guess.</p>

<p>In barrons it says not to label, so I would just go with that.</p>

<p>I’m probably just going to do one long paragraph.</p>

<p>Make it easier on the graders. Indenting for each portion of the question is probably best if Barron’s says not to label.</p>

<p>Mmmkay, thanks, I’ll do that.</p>

<p>Is it necessary to divide the sections like that? I got a practice frq in class a few days ago, and the questions was something like A) Define these terms and B) give an example for each of the terms in relation to how they affect blah blah blah</p>

<p>So I combined A and B. If I did that on the real test, would it lower my score?</p>