<p>I'm staying up all night, but probably reading PR and doing practice tests, so probably won't be much help for a review session. </p>
<p>Does anyone know if we have to memorize stuff like the Krebs cycle and Calvin cycle? (like, actually memorize the diagrams. Like, NAD+ becomes NADH here, etc)</p>
<p>In five steps to a five, they say you don't have to memorize the diagrams, just be familiar with them and know what the Krebs cycle produces (end results, I guess, and how often it occurs per drop of...something). I don't know if that's correct, but that's basically what they say.</p>
<p>The Barron's book specifically says that they won't appear on the exam.</p>
<p>Enzymes would be the ideal FRQ because it's ridiculously easy to crank out 10 random facts about them. But I know it's going to be something obscure that I've never even cared to study.</p>
<p>I'm hoping for gene regulation as one.</p>
<p>At this point I'm just going through the Barron's book and reading sample FRQ answers, going to mimic them if applicable on the exam.</p>
<p>I just finished the test =) .. since i'm in GMT +7
it's not as hard as i thought it would be compared to past exams... especially the FRQ.. MC was kinda ok.. though some questions were strangely worded (and confusing)</p>
<p>O_O Wow, we have someone that finished the test on here! I'm GMT-8, so.....test is 9 hrs away. So in your opinion, it was easier than the tests that Collegeboard released in the past years, like 2002? What book did you study from?</p>
<p>And MC was hard, while FRQ were actually easy? </p>
<p>I know that you can't discuss questions, but you can answer those questions, right?</p>
<p>While we're at it, can anyone confirm for me, in prophase, is it the nucleolus that disappears, or the nucleus?</p>
<p>How many people are in for all-nighters today? I know a few ppl earlier said they were, but let's do a head count. If we do have enough, we can actually help each other on the exam, if we all ask questions about concepts covered poorly by our prep books here and the ppl that answer can have good review. Just a thought, because I think I'm in for an all-nighter too. Even though most people say that's bad, because then you'll be sleepy on the actual exam @_@</p>
<p>haha. yeah same! its 3 am here..test starts at 7:30-8 ish
Going over animal functions right now, then photosynthesis, then labs.. uhh FAIL.
what do we need to know about evolution??!
omg i finishe dplants like an hour ago.. took me FOREVER</p>
<p>Mmm, seems we have a good number of people, actually. I really want that 5, so I'm staying up until I collapse or something. It seems we're either from the East Coast or West (I'm in CA) </p>
<p>Ahmadh007, your teacher doesn't excuse you from school before the APs? At my school, we have what's known as a 0 per (starts at 6:51 everyday), but the teacher just marks us there even if we're not if we have an AP exam that day. I can't skip the stuff after Bio is over, but at least I get some extra time to sleep/study, w/e.</p>
<p>And yeah, alvareli, most say Cliff's is good. Most ppl on Amazon say so, at least. Some here tend to lean towards PR, but I think those are the best for Bio. (Well, Cliffs is good for labs, at least. PR fails at that)</p>