What AP Foundations really asks of Islamic Studies
Last October, my 10th-grade Islamic Studies class froze when I asked for a one-sentence claim after reading a translated hadith about intention. They knew the story, but not how to argue from it. That’s the AP Foundations gap. In our American track, Islamic Studies sits alongside skills we expect for AP-style courses: sourcing a document, building a defensible thesis, and using evidence—concise, analytical, and secular in tone. On-topic slides that are devotional or overly descriptive miss the brief. So do imports from other systems that rely on recall-heavy worksheets.
I look for resources that frame Qur’an or hadith passages (in translation) as historical or ethical sources to analyze, not to affirm. I need prompts that mirror American scoring language (“evaluate,” “to what extent,” “using at least two documents”). Case studies that connect law, society, and governance—Medina Charter debates, Abbasid bureaucracy, Ottoman millet practices—work well. Materials should also observe basic American guidelines on teaching about religion: neutral, academic, and comparative when helpful. If I can’t find that mix, I rebuild from scratch and top up with community pieces in the social studies corner here.