<p>Okay so the AP bio test is in two weeks, and we haven't finished all the material. Plants we have not touched (but I remember the basics and general things from honors two years ago), and the same goes for animal behavior. We briefly went over ecology and development, but we still have some animal systems that were not covered/covered fully (we covered most of them though). Also, although I know the kingdoms and domains, I have no clue about any of the phyla.</p>
<p>So I would really appreciate it if someone gave me advice on what to focus on studying and what not to study (or what to just skim briefly). Does the test go into extreme depth into everything? There is just so much information.</p>
<p>[AP:</a> Biology](<a href=“AP Biology – AP Students | College Board”>AP Biology – AP Students | College Board)</p>
<p>good to note:
B. Structure and Function of Plants and Animals (32%)
- Reproduction, growth, and development
- Structural, physiological, and behavioral adaptations
- Response to the environment</p>
<p>Cover: BASICS FOR EVERYTHING.</p>
<p>Example: Don’t need to know how kreb cycle works specifically, but you want to know end products. You don’t need to know respiration, response, reproduction of annelida, but you do need to know it is bilateral and has a coelom, it is protostome, etc. Try to cover as much definition as you can about Ecology, Evolution.</p>
<p>I am most concerned about Plants, Development, (some) Systems, and Ecology. So advice for the whole test is much appreciated (because that is very helpful), but if you have any specific advice on those four wsections please do inform.</p>
<p>Plants:
Know the difference between mosses, ferns, gymnosperms, angiosperms (which cycle is dominant etc) Know the adaptations of angiosperm. Some life cycles.</p>
<p>Systems:
Main idea?</p>
<p>Development:
I haven’t done it except uh are you talking about human reproduction or animal reproduction (zygote, morula, bastula, gastrulation, organeosis etc? Because for that you only need basics, step wise. Deutero and Protostomes"</p>
<p>Ecology:
Definitions. k, r groups, curves, etc.</p>