From blank page
to exam confidence
in one sitting.
Chronicle distills centuries of conflict, revolution, and reform into structured study guides built by the historians who graded your exam. Tell us what you're studying — we'll pull the right volume.
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2,400+ students built their study plan this semester
Stop copying Wikipedia. Start building arguments that earn the complexity point — with guides written by the people who set the rubric.
The Chronicle Difference
Free notes vs. a guide built to score
Every row below was built by a specialist. Between the comparisons, meet the person who wrote that section — and why they cared enough to get it right.
| Dimension | Free Notes | Chronicle |
|---|---|---|
| Source Citation Depth | ||
![]() Dr. Amara Osei-BonsuDecolonization & Nationalist Movements PhD Candidate, African & Colonial History "The exam asks for causation — I teach you to see it in the primary source before you write a single word." Columbia University · 6 AP History courses graded | ||
| Timeline Integration | ||
![]() Marcus DelacroixFrench Revolution & Napoleonic Era Documentary Researcher & IB Examiner "Context without chronology is just trivia. My guides thread both so you argue, not just list." IB Paper 2 Examiner · BBC History documentary researcher | ||
| Exam-Specific Formatting | ||
![]() Prof. Yuki Tanaka-MorrisonEast Asian Empires & Trade Networks Retired AP World History Grader "I read 2,000 DBQs a year for twelve years. I know exactly what earns the complexity point — and I wrote it into every guide." AP Chief Reader 2011–2023 · Yale History, MA | ||
| Thesis Statement Templates | ||
| Historiography Coverage | ||
![]() Dr. Fatima Al-RashidiOttoman Empire, Silk Road, Medieval Islam Ottoman & Islamic History Specialist "Western Civ syllabi often skip the East. My guides don't — because your exam question won't either." Georgetown University · Fulbright Scholar 2019 | ||
| Outside Evidence Suggestions | ||
| Complexity / Nuance Points | ||
| Scattered across the web | Build My Study Plan | |
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The People Behind the Pages
Every guide has a name on the spine
Chronicle guides aren't assembled by algorithm. Each one was built by a historian who spent years in the archive, at the grading table, or in the lecture hall — and who knows exactly what your examiner is looking for.

Dr. Amara Osei-Bonsu
PhD Candidate, African & Colonial History
Columbia University · 6 AP History courses graded
"The exam asks for causation — I teach you to see it in the primary source before you write a single word."

Prof. Yuki Tanaka-Morrison
Retired AP World History Chief Reader
AP Chief Reader 2011–2023 · Yale History, MA
"I read 2,000 DBQs a year for twelve years. I know exactly what earns the complexity point — and I wrote it into every guide."

Marcus Delacroix
Documentary Researcher & IB Examiner
IB Paper 2 Examiner · BBC History documentary researcher
"Context without chronology is just trivia. My guides thread both so you argue, not just list."

Dr. Fatima Al-Rashidi
Ottoman & Islamic History Specialist
Georgetown University · Fulbright Scholar 2019
"Western Civ syllabi often skip the East. My guides don't — because your exam question won't either."
From the Stacks
Students who came in blank,
left with a score
I had the DBQ in nine hours and still hadn't touched Ottoman contextualization. The Chronicle guide had a sourcing scaffold I could fill in like a template — I passed with a 5.

Priya Venkataraman
AP World History, Junior — Austin, TX
The stacks are open
Your exam date is on the calendar.
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