<p>I have 10th Honors Lit (annotating two books, this is the hardest and takes the most time), AP World (also hard but takes less time), AP Compsci (easy and short, I just procrastinate a lot), plus SAT & ACT prep on weekends</p>
<p>AP Lit - read and annotate A Farewell to Arms
AP Chem - answer chapter questions for first 3 chapters. (Wonder if she knows the answers are in the back of the book?)
AP Gov. - read Gideon’s trumpet and answer a ton of questions in paragraph form and define some words. All handwritten of course :/</p>
<p>AP Physics 1- 6 pages of Math and Physics review.
AP Lit- Read Beowulf, No Country For Old Men, and A Star Called Henry.
AP Calc AB- I don’t know yet, but there will be homework.</p>
<p>For AP World, we have to read the first 3 chapters of our book (about 100 pages), and make a world map + fladhcards. Nothing for any other classes, but I should probably review some things for AP Bio.</p>
<p>DE Research - background research, conduct experiment to determine the rate at which an object
accelerates toward the ground when in free fall near the surface of the Earth
AP Physics C Mech - summarize science article, pre-course knowledge survey
DE Humanities - read 1984, Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Ender’s Game
AP Calculus AB - 15 page long packet w/ questions</p>
<p>AP English Lang.- read “In Cold Blood” and write 25 entries. Another book, 5 entries, find an essay/critique on “ICB,” and read/annotate 3 short stories. </p>
<p>AP Stats.- odd problems of 6 chapters </p>
<p>APUSH- two 3+ page outlines on the Gilded Age, 3 page research paper </p>
<p>I think I need to read a book for my Honors English seminar - or rather, there’s a very specific book that is going to be read during my Honors English Seminar that I want to get out of the way and read before class starts. That’s about it though.</p>
<p>AP compsci: read around 60 pages from the online textbook, do about 100 stupid questions (all have one word or one sentence answers). Did it all the day I got it, only took me a few hours.
AP physics C (mech only): none, just familiarize yourself with calculus by the time the school year starts (already done).
AP stats: do some packet about a data set, familiarize yourself with a few concepts online.
AP chem: do a lot of problems from the honors textbook, read about some stuff online.
Chem is really the only subject with a substantial amount of work.</p>