AP Latin
AP Latin is an Advanced Placement course and examination administered by the College Board, designed for high school students to engage with Latin literature at an intermediate college level, equivalent to third- or fourth-semester university coursework.[1] The program emphasizes the development of skills in reading, translating, and analyzing classical Latin texts, while exploring their literary, historical, and cultural contexts to deepen understanding of ancient Roman society.[2] The current curriculum, revised for the 2025-26 school year, requires study of selected passages from Vergil's Aeneid (Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 11, and 12) and Pliny the Younger's Letters (including accounts of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, ghosts and apparitions, and letters to Trajan and Calpurnia), supplemented by teacher-selected prose and poetry, sight-reading exercises, and four annually chosen non-syllabus passages for project-based analysis.[3] This framework, organized into six units, replaces the prior focus on Vergil and Julius Caesar's Gallic War, reducing the core syllabus by approximately 6,000 words while adding flexibility for additional readings and aligning more closely with diverse college curricula.[3] Students build proficiency in three consolidated skill categories: comprehending Latin poetry and/or prose; describing style, structure, and purpose; and analyzing the significance of the text.[2] The AP Latin Exam, typically taken in May, is now fully digital and lasts three hours, comprising a 65-minute multiple-choice section (52 questions, including sight-reading and syllabus-based sets) and a 115-minute free-response section (featuring a translation, short-answer questions on comprehension, a short essay, and two project-based short essays on non-syllabus passages).[4] Scores range from 1 to 5, with 3 or higher often qualifying for college credit or placement, as determined by individual institutions; in 2025, 58.6% of students achieved a score of 3 or higher.[5] The course also incorporates ongoing assessments, such as in-class project checkpoints submitted via the AP Digital Portfolio, to support skill development throughout the year.[3]History of the Course
Origins and Early Development
The Advanced Placement (AP) Latin program was established in 1956 as part of the broader AP initiative launched by the College Board, aiming to provide high school students with college-level instruction in Latin to bridge the gap between secondary and postsecondary education and avoid curricular duplication.[6] This effort stemmed from earlier experiments funded by the Ford Foundation beginning in 1951, involving elite preparatory schools and universities, and gained further impetus after the 1957 Sputnik launch, which prompted increased federal support for advanced studies in subjects like classics through the National Defense Education Act of 1958.[6] Initially targeted at capable students in affluent public and private schools, AP Latin sought to cultivate proficiency equivalent to a college freshman level, emphasizing the language's role in understanding Roman history, literature, and culture. The early curriculum centered on a broad survey of Latin literature, divided into tracks such as Latin IV, focused on Vergil's poetry including the Aeneid, and Latin V, covering prose authors like Cicero, comic playwrights such as Plautus or Terence, and lyric poets like Catullus and Ovid.[6] Instruction prioritized sight translation—reading unseen passages to build fluency—alongside rigorous grammar review, scansion for poetry, and basic literary analysis to prepare students for college-level engagement with original texts.[6] The syllabus for AP Latin first appeared in the 1958 NASSP Bulletin, outlining these components to guide teachers in delivering standardized, advanced content.[6] Key milestones in the program's early development included the administration of the first AP Latin exams at the end of the 1955-56 school year, with 1,220 students across 104 schools participating in initial AP testing that encompassed Latin among other subjects.[6] By 1958, formal exams were managed by the Educational Testing Service in collaboration with the College Board, marking wider availability.[6] During the 1970s and 1980s, the program underwent shifts toward greater standardization, with participation expanding to over 3,000 schools by 1970 and a pivotal move in 1983 to a course-based structure following the A Nation at Risk report, which emphasized prescribed readings to ensure consistent testing and enhanced rigor in subjects like Latin.[6] Vergil's Aeneid solidified as a core text during this period, reflecting its foundational status in the curriculum from the outset but with increasing emphasis on specific selections for analysis. The early exam format was primarily essay-based, featuring translation exercises, grammatical identification, and interpretive essays on literary themes, typically lasting three hours to assess comprehensive skills.[6] This foundational phase laid the groundwork for AP Latin's evolution, culminating in a transition to more focused curricula by 2012.[6]Pre-2012 Curriculum
Prior to 2012, the AP Latin program consisted of two separate exams: AP Latin: Vergil, which centered on selected passages from Vergil's Aeneid (approximately 1,828 lines from Books 1, 2, 4, and 6), and AP Latin: Literature, which covered poetry by Catullus, Horace, and Ovid (discontinued after 2011). These readings were designed to expose students to epic poetry and other literary genres, fostering an understanding of Roman literature through original language study. The Vergil curriculum required literal translation of the specified passages, with additional context provided by reading the full works or related sections in English to support thematic and literary comprehension. The course structure prioritized foundational skills in Latin language and literary interpretation, guided by the College Board syllabus without formal thematic units. Instruction focused on literal translation of the required texts, scansion of dactylic hexameter in Vergil's poetry, and basic literary analysis, including identification of figures of speech, word choice, and narrative techniques. Teachers typically organized lessons around sequential reading of the syllabus passages, incorporating grammar review, vocabulary building from high-frequency words in the texts, and discussions of cultural and historical contexts, such as the Augustan ideal in Vergil. This approach aimed to build proficiency in reading authentic Latin at a college-intermediate level. Key abilities tested in the curriculum included sight reading of unseen Latin passages to assess translation accuracy and comprehension under time constraints, as well as identification of grammatical structures like cases, tenses, and syntax in both prose and verse. Students were also expected to recognize poetic meter, such as the dactylic hexameter in the Aeneid, and rhetorical devices including similes, apostrophes, and anaphora. These skills were developed through regular practice with prepared texts and applied to broader analysis of literary elements, preparing students for interpretive tasks. The AP Latin: Vergil exam prior to 2012 consisted of a 1-hour multiple-choice section with questions on four passages (two from the syllabus and two sight readings), testing knowledge of content, grammar, and literary devices from the required readings. The 2-hour free-response section (including a 15-minute reading period) included translation of two prepared passages from the syllabus, short-answer questions on grammar and scansion, and an essay analyzing themes such as heroism, fate, or the role of the gods in Vergil's narrative. Scoring emphasized accurate translation, supported textual evidence, and insightful analysis, with the exam designed to evaluate college-level readiness in Latin reading and interpretation.2012–2025 Curriculum
The AP Latin curriculum implemented in 2012 by the College Board introduced a standardized framework that balanced the study of Latin prose and poetry, requiring students to engage deeply with selected passages from Julius Caesar's De Bello Gallico and Vergil's Aeneid. This curriculum mandated 1,723 lines of Latin from Vergil's Aeneid, drawn from Books 1 (lines 1–209, 418–440, 494–578), 2 (lines 40–56, 201–249, 268–297, 559–620), 4 (lines 160–218, 259–361, 659–705), and 6 (lines 295–332, 384–425, 450–476, 847–899), alongside readings in English from the full Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 12 to provide broader context. For Caesar, students analyzed approximately 1,250 words of Latin from De Bello Gallico Book 1 (chapters 1–7), Book 4 (chapters 24–35 and the first sentence of 36), Book 5 (chapters 24–48), and Book 6 (chapters 13–20), with English summaries of Books 1, 6, and 7 to support historical understanding. These selections emphasized key episodes, such as Aeneas's arrival in Carthage and the fall of Troy in Vergil, and Caesar's accounts of Gallic geography and warfare, fostering a comparative approach to Roman literature.[7] The course integrated the required readings with grammar review, vocabulary acquisition, and historical context across seven overarching themes—literary genre and style, Roman values, war and empire, leadership, views of non-Romans, history and memory, and human beings and the gods—while incorporating essential questions to guide analysis, like how epic conventions shape narrative in Vergil or how Caesar portrays Roman imperialism. Instruction included ongoing sight-reading practice from recommended authors like Cornelius Nepos and Ovid to develop fluency, alongside formal skill categories: translation (literal rendering of Latin to English), interpretation (analyzing purpose, audience, and style), and synthesis (connecting texts to broader contexts). This structure promoted deeper textual engagement over rote memorization, with vocabulary lists derived from the syllabus texts to reinforce approximately 1,500–2,000 high-frequency words.[7] A key innovation was introducing Caesar's prose alongside reduced selections from Vergil (from approximately 1,828 lines pre-2012), replacing the prior Vergil-only exam and the discontinued AP Latin: Literature. This shift maintained continuity in core text selections from Vergil's Aeneid but streamlined passages to prioritize complete scenes for thematic depth, enabling students to explore cultural elements like divine intervention and imperial ambition without overwhelming breadth. Pedagogically, the curriculum emphasized teacher-facilitated discussions on contexts such as epic conventions in Vergil's portrayal of fate and heroism, and Caesar's rhetorical strategies in justifying Roman expansion, often through activities like scansion of dactylic hexameter and comparative essays. Regular assessments, including translation exercises and analytical writing, ensured students could contextualize literary choices within Roman history and mythology.[7]Current Curriculum (2025–Present)
Required Texts and Readings
The AP Latin course for 2025–present mandates readings from two core authors: Vergil's Aeneid and Pliny the Younger's Epistulae (Letters), with selections designed to expose students to epic poetry and varied prose styles.[2] These texts are read in the original Latin, accompanied by English translations for contextual analysis, emphasizing themes such as Roman identity, historical events, and personal relationships in the Augustan era for Vergil.[2] Vergil's selections span Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 11, and 12 of the Aeneid, encompassing approximately 1,200 lines that highlight key episodes like the fall of Troy, Dido's encounter with Aeneas, the underworld journey, and the Latin War, using dactylic hexameter to convey epic grandeur and mythological elements.[2] Specific excerpts include Book 1 lines 1–33, 88–107, and 496–508; Book 2 lines 40–56 and 201–249; Book 4 lines 74–89, 165–197, and 305–361; and portions from the other listed books focusing on heroism, fate, and Roman destiny.[2] Pliny's required readings draw from Books 1–10 of the Epistulae, featuring letters on diverse topics such as the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 CE (e.g., Letters 6.16 and 6.20), ghostly apparitions (Letter 7.27), administrative correspondence with Emperor Trajan (e.g., Letters 10.37, 10.90), and personal notes to his wife Calpurnia, illustrating epistolary prose, patronage, and daily Roman life.[2] Notable selections include Letters 6.4, 6.7 (to Calpurnia), 6.16, 6.20 (Vesuvius), 7.27 (ghosts), 10.5–10.7, 10.37, and 10.90 (to Trajan).[2] This curriculum replaces prior emphasis on military prose with Pliny's selections to provide broader exposure to Roman prose varieties, including historical eyewitness accounts like the Vesuvius disaster and intimate personal correspondence, fostering deeper understanding of stylistic nuances and cultural contexts.[2] Supplementary readings, selected by teachers, add approximately 1,650 words of prose (from Units 1–3) and 1,350 words of poetry (from Units 4 and 6), drawn from non-syllabus authors such as Catullus, Horace, or Ovid, or modern Latin novellas, to build sight-reading skills without exam accountability.[2] Additionally, a required course project incorporates four annually released nonsyllabus passages (two prose and two poetry, each 100–150 words) from classical to modern periods, such as Perpetua's Passio, for analytical essays that enhance comparative abilities.[2] A core vocabulary list, detailed in the course's appendices, covers high-frequency words appearing three or more times in the required texts (e.g., specific sets for Aeneid Book 1 or Letter 6.16), totaling essential terms for translation and analysis, with unglossed exam words limited to this list excluding proper names.[2] Instruction emphasizes morphology, syntax, and author-specific stylistics, such as Vergil's similes and enjambment or Pliny's rhetorical questions and periodic sentences, to support contextual comprehension over rote grammar drills.[2]Course Units and Structure
The AP Latin course for 2025–present is organized into six thematic units, a reduction from the previous eight-unit structure, allowing for deeper engagement with core texts and increased flexibility in instruction.[2] This framework integrates required readings from Vergil's Aeneid and Pliny the Younger's Letters, alongside teacher-selected supplementary texts, to build students' abilities in translation, analysis, and contextualization.[2] The units span approximately 120 class periods over a standard school year, with pacing recommendations of 16 to 26 periods per unit to accommodate varying class schedules and student needs.[2] The units are thematically driven, drawing on Roman epic poetry, historical prose, and cultural motifs to explore identity, heroism, fate, and societal values. Unit 1 introduces Roman epic and identity through selections from Aeneid Book 1 (lines 1–209, 418–440, 494–578), emphasizing the gods' role and foundational grammar.[2] Unit 2 examines the hero's journey, the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, and divine will via additional Aeneid Book 1 passages (lines 34–123, 88–107, 257–296, 371–417, 441–493, 496–508, 579–743) and Pliny's Letters 6.16.1–22 and 6.20.1–20, incorporating eyewitness accounts of the 79 CE disaster.[2] Unit 3 addresses love, duty, ghosts, personal correspondence, and leadership with Aeneid Book 4 (lines 1–73, 74–89, 165–197, 305–361, 643–705) and Pliny's Letters 7.27.1–16, 10.5–7, 10.37, 10.90, 6.4, and 6.7.[2] Unit 4 focuses on war, peace, and poetic forms using Aeneid Books 1 (lines 1–33) and 2 (lines 40–56, 201–249, 268–297, 559–620, 735–805).[2] Unit 5 explores fate, Roman destiny, war in Italy, and legacy through extensive Aeneid excerpts from Books 4, 6, 7, 11, and 12, highlighting themes of heroism and identity.[2] Unit 6 culminates in Roman values, virtues, and independent analysis with Aeneid Book 12 (lines 930–952) and the course project.[2] Across units, teachers integrate approximately 1,650 words of prose (e.g., from Cicero or Livy) in Units 1–3 and 1,350 words of poetry (e.g., from Ovid or Catullus) in Units 4–6, selected from an appendix to align with unit themes and student proficiency.[2] Project-based learning is embedded primarily in Unit 6 but can extend across Units 3–5, requiring students to analyze four non-syllabus passages (two prose and two poetry, each 100–150 words or lines, released annually by the College Board).[2] These passages, spanning classical to modern Latin, are accessed via the AP Digital Portfolio, with teachers submitting scores for two checkpoints: an initial summary or translation (Checkpoint 1) and a interpretive product such as an essay or presentation with Latin evidence (Checkpoint 2).[2] The project demands at least 12 class periods (about 2.5 weeks) and directly links to the exam through two free-response questions—one on prose and one on poetry—fostering skills in translation and argument without relying on memorized texts.[2] Pacing emphasizes balance and adaptability, with roughly 50% of instructional time devoted to required syllabus texts, 20–30% to supplementary teacher's choice readings, and 25% to projects and skill-building activities like contextualization exercises.[2] Throughout, units stress connections to Roman history (e.g., the Punic Wars, Augustus's era, Trajan's administration), literary genres (epic, epistolary), and cultural elements (mythology, social norms, religion) to deepen textual interpretation.[2] These revisions, effective for 2025–26, reduce the required reading by approximately 6,000 words—through streamlined Aeneid selections and replacement of Caesar's Gallic War with Pliny's Letters—enabling more focused analysis rather than rote memorization.[2] Additionally, the curriculum adds essential knowledge statements on grammar (e.g., noun cases, verb moods, syntax) and stylistics (e.g., dactylic hexameter scanning, rhetorical devices like chiasmus), integrated into each unit to support reading comprehension and stylistic awareness.[2] A 1,000-word core vocabulary list further aids accessibility.[2]| Unit | Theme | Key Readings | Approx. Periods |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Roman Epic and Identity | Aeneid Book 1 (selected lines); Teacher's Choice Prose (~300 words) | 16 |
| 2 | Hero's Journey; Vesuvius Eruption; Divine Will | Aeneid Book 1 (additional lines); Pliny Letters 6.16, 6.20; Teacher's Choice Prose (~225 words) | 20 |
| 3 | Love and Duty; Ghosts and Leadership | Aeneid Book 4 (selected lines); Pliny Letters (various); Teacher's Choice Prose (~225 words) | 18 |
| 4 | War and Peace | Aeneid Books 1–2 (selected lines); Teacher's Choice Poetry (~250–300 words) | 22 |
| 5 | Fate and Roman Destiny | Aeneid Books 4, 6, 7, 11, 12 (selected lines) | 26 |
| 6 | Roman Values and Project | Aeneid Book 12 (selected lines); 4 Project Passages; Teacher's Choice Poetry (~500 words) | 18 |
Skills and Learning Objectives
The AP Latin course for 2025–present emphasizes three consolidated skill categories designed to build students' proficiency in engaging with classical Latin literature at an intermediate college level. These skills integrate reading, analysis, and contextual understanding, primarily through the study of Vergil's Aeneid and Pliny the Younger's letters, while incorporating sight reading and project-based assessments.[2] The first skill category, Read and Comprehend, requires students to accurately interpret and translate Latin texts by identifying word meanings, grammatical structures, and overall content. Specific competencies include defining vocabulary in context or through derivatives (e.g., recognizing pietas as duty in Vergil's Aeneid), describing how grammar affects meaning—such as noun cases like the genitive for possession or subjunctive moods in purpose clauses—and summarizing explicit and implied ideas in English. Translation skills demand both idiomatic and literal renderings, justifying choices based on syntax and context, as seen in passages like Aeneid 1.88–107, where students scan dactylic hexameter and translate descriptions of the Trojan storm. Figures of speech, such as similes or alliteration, are identified to support comprehension, ensuring students grasp syntax and meter fundamental to poetic texts like Vergil's epic.[2] The second skill category, Describe Style and Context, focuses on articulating the purpose, audience, tone, and stylistic features of Latin works within their historical and cultural settings. Students describe rhetorical devices like repetition or metaphors, metrical patterns such as dactylic hexameter in Vergil, and genre conventions, including epic narrative in the Aeneid versus epistolary persuasion in Pliny's letters (e.g., Pliny 6.16 on the Vesuvius eruption, aimed at documenting historical events for a Roman elite audience). Contextual analysis covers Roman history, mythology, and social norms, such as Augustus's propaganda in Vergil or Pliny's ethical tone under Trajan's administration, highlighting how style serves narrative or persuasive goals.[2] The third skill category, Analyze, enables students to interpret poetry and prose for deeper thematic, historical, and cultural insights, supporting arguments with textual evidence. This involves developing interpretations of main ideas, effects, or viewpoints—such as Roman imperialism and pietas in the Aeneid contrasted with personal ethics in Pliny's correspondence—and explaining how stylistic, contextual, or grammatical elements substantiate these views, citing specific Latin lines like Aeneid 2.40–56 for Aeneas's personal narrative. Comparisons across texts, such as epic heroism versus epistolary realism, foster synthesis of themes like duty versus individual morality.[2] Overarching learning objectives cultivate critical thinking by synthesizing required texts with unseen passages, applying skills to independent analysis, and integrating project-based work. Students engage in a course project analyzing four non-syllabus passages (two prose, two poetry, 100–150 words each), developing summaries, interpretations, and evidence-based arguments through checkpoints that emphasize translation accuracy and thematic connections. This approach prepares learners to handle sight reading, as in early units where translation skills are applied to unfamiliar excerpts, promoting transferable expertise in classical interpretation.[2] These skills represent a consolidation from five prior categories to three, streamlining instruction while adding emphasis on genre conventions (e.g., epic versus epistolary) and broader contextualization of Roman literature. The revisions reduce technical grammar drills in favor of integrated analysis, aligning the curriculum more closely with diverse college-level Latin courses and enhancing focus on authorial intent and cultural relevance.[2]Examination
Format and Content
The AP Latin exam, effective for the May 2026 exam and subsequent years (2025-26 school year implementation), is a three-hour digital assessment administered by the College Board, consisting of a multiple-choice section and a free-response section that together evaluate students' proficiency in reading, translating, and analyzing Latin texts.[2][3] The exam draws primarily from the required syllabus texts—Vergil's Aeneid (Books 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 11, and 12) and selections from Pliny the Younger's Letters—while incorporating supplementary and project-based passages to assess a range of skills including translation accuracy, stylistic interpretation, and thematic argumentation.[2] Section I, the multiple-choice portion, lasts 65 minutes and includes 52 questions designed to test sight-reading and comprehension of both familiar and unfamiliar Latin. This section features 20 discrete sight-reading questions, each based on a brief passage (up to 20 words) from non-syllabus Vergil, Pliny, or underrepresented authors. It also contains four short sets of three questions each (12 questions total), covering sight prose (20–30 words), sight poetry (3–4 lines), syllabus prose from Pliny (20–30 words), and syllabus poetry from Vergil (3–4 lines). Additionally, 20 questions (10 per set across two sets) focus on longer syllabus passages, such as 75–90 words from Pliny's prose or 10–12 lines from Vergil's dactylic hexameter poetry.[2] Section II, the free-response portion, spans 115 minutes without a separate reading period and comprises five questions that require extended engagement with Latin texts. Question 1 is a short answer set (~15 minutes) with 6–8 subquestions assessing style, context, translation, and scansion of a syllabus passage (5–10 lines from Vergil or 50–75 words from Pliny). Question 2 is a dedicated translation (~15 minutes) of a syllabus passage (~35 words from Vergil or ~40 words from Pliny) into idiomatic English across 15 segments. Question 3 is a short essay (~25 minutes) with 2 subquestions on comprehension and interpretation of a syllabus passage (~35–55 words from Vergil or ~40–60 words from Pliny), requiring a summary and analysis with specific Latin evidence in ~3–4 sentences. Question 4 (~30 minutes), tied to the course project, involves a non-syllabus prose passage (100–150 words): Part A (summary in 4–5 sentences capturing beginning, middle, end) and Part B (7–8 sentence analysis of literary techniques or themes with at least two specific Latin citations and contextual insights). Question 5 (~30 minutes) similarly addresses a non-syllabus poetry passage (100–150 words or 6–10 lines): Part A (summary) and Part B (interpretation emphasizing evidence and style).[2] Overall, the exam allocates a significant portion of its content to Vergil's poetry and Pliny's prose, with additional emphasis on supplementary or project-related passages, ensuring a balanced evaluation of core skills like literal translation to idiomatic English and contextual stylistic analysis.[2] Key revisions implemented for the 2025–26 school year include expanding the multiple-choice section's time and question count for broader sight-reading coverage, eliminating the prior 15-minute reading period, long sight-reading sets, and dual-passage comparative essays, while introducing dedicated translation and project-based questions alongside a short answer set to connect classroom learning directly to exam tasks.[3]Scoring and Grading
The AP Latin exam's scoring combines performance from Section I and Section II to produce a composite score, with each section weighted at approximately 50%. Section I features 52 multiple-choice questions (MCQs), each awarded 1 point for a correct answer, resulting in a maximum raw score of 52; there is no penalty for incorrect or unanswered questions, encouraging educated guessing where appropriate.[2] Additionally, course project checkpoints contribute 2% (5 points total: 2 for Checkpoint 1 summary, 3 for Checkpoint 2 interpretive product) to the composite score, submitted via the AP Digital Portfolio by May 31.[2] Section II, the free-response portion, totals up to approximately 52–54 points across its five questions, scaled to match the MCQ contribution. Question 1 (short answer) allocates 6–8 points (1 point per subquestion) for accuracy in style/context analysis, translation, and scansion. Question 2 (translation) carries 15 points (1 per segment) for precise, idiomatic renderings without altering meaning. Question 3 (short essay) allocates 9 points: 1 for summary and up to 8 for analysis with evidence. Questions 4 and 5 (project-based) each carry 11 points: 4 for the summary (1 overall + 1 each for beginning/middle/end) and 7 for analysis (1 for interpretation + 2 per two Latin citations + 2 for context/style).[2] Rubrics for evaluation prioritize precision and fidelity in translation, requiring literal yet idiomatic renderings of Latin segments without alteration of meaning. For essays, summaries, and analyses, scoring employs analytic scales, such as 0–4 for the strength of the thesis, quality of supporting evidence from the Latin text (requiring specific quotations), and logical argumentation, ensuring integration of specific quotations to substantiate claims. These criteria assess not only linguistic accuracy but also the student's ability to engage with literary and historical contexts.[2] The composite score translates raw points into a 1–5 scale through a weighted conversion table, where a score of 3 or higher generally qualifies students for college credit or placement, depending on institutional policies. Updates to the 2025–26 framework include streamlined rubrics for project-related essays, focusing on targeted evidence use with specific Latin citations, and a shift toward concise analytical responses over extensive verbatim translations to better align with intermediate college-level expectations.[3][2]Performance Statistics
Grade Distributions
The AP Latin exam score distributions have shown consistent patterns since the curriculum's redesign in 2012, which consolidated previous separate exams in Vergil and Literature into a single course focused on specific texts from Caesar and Vergil. Prior to 2012, pass rates (scores of 3 or higher) for the AP Latin Literature exam averaged around 58%, with variability due to the broader scope of required readings across multiple authors. For example, in 2009, scores were distributed as 13.7% at 5, 15.8% at 4, 23.8% at 3, 17.0% at 2, and 29.8% at 1, yielding a 53.3% pass rate.[8] From 2012 to 2025, distributions reflect a more standardized syllabus, with 5s typically ranging from 10% to 21%, 4s from 16% to 22%, 3s from 24% to 32%, 2s from 17% to 25%, and 1s from 10% to 20%. Representative recent data include 2024, with 11.9% at 5, 16.6% at 4, 28.0% at 3, 23.0% at 2, and 20.5% at 1 (56.5% pass rate); and 2025, with 12.5% at 5, 16.7% at 4, 29.4% at 3, 25.2% at 2, and 16.2% at 1 (58.6% pass rate). Mean scores over this period hovered between 2.76 and 3.10, with a notable spike to 69.2% pass rate in 2020 amid adjusted exam formats.[8] Long-term trends indicate pass rates averaging 60–65% from 2012 to 2024, peaking at 66.6% in 2013 and stabilizing around 57% in recent years, influenced by steady test-taker numbers declining from over 6,600 in the mid-2010s to 4,264 in 2024.[8] Performance factors include stronger results in translation sections, particularly for prose passages from Caesar, where about 15% of students achieved near-perfect scores (13+ out of 15) in 2021, compared to lower averages for poetry translations from Vergil, where 11% scored 0 out of 15. Essay responses show greater variability due to demands for analytical depth in comparing author techniques and cultural contexts, often resulting in lower free-response averages than multiple-choice sections overall.[9] Demographic data reveal gender balance in participation, with males comprising 53% and females 47% of AP Latin exam takers in the class of 2013.[10]| Year | % at 5 | % at 4 | % at 3 | % at 2 | % at 1 | Pass Rate (3+) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | 21.3 | 17.0 | 24.6 | 18.5 | 18.6 | 62.9 |
| 2017 | 12.5 | 19.4 | 31.5 | 23.0 | 13.6 | 63.4 |
| 2020 | 16.5 | 20.4 | 32.2 | 17.9 | 12.9 | 69.2 |
| 2024 | 11.9 | 16.6 | 28.0 | 23.0 | 20.5 | 56.5 |
| 2025 | 12.5 | 16.7 | 29.4 | 25.2 | 16.2 | 58.6 |