<p>I don’t get why you guys said the questions were so easy. Topics included chi-squares* and hyperstatic something*?</p>
<p>*In no way does mentioning these suggest what the question specifically asked or what the answers to said questions were, just saying.</p>
<p>I agree that the questions were hard. I actually opened the FR and was like, “What the hell???”</p>
<p>I thought it was easy because the test asked stuff that we specifically went over in class. And I really didn’t have to take AP Bio in order to answer the last 20 questions. I just had to look at the chart. Really? What’s the independent variable?? Really??</p>
<p>Well if you guys said the test was easy because at least 80% of the questions were easy, then yeah I’d agree. There were maybe 5 I completely guessed on, and maybe 10 or 15 I narrowed down to two choices. Some were pretty obscure though, such as the ones in the section where you select from a list.</p>
<p>All I can say is THANK GOD FOR BOSEMAN!</p>
<p>I seriously went over 50% of the MC and frq content last night with those videos! I am so happy! I did so well</p>
<p>except the frq…I totally messed up on one of them and the last one I was like, ***! and I just didn’t even do most of it. ugh. I rocked the MC though!</p>
<p>@toystory… I literally did the exact same thing! Great minds, I guess</p>
<p>is saying that some plants are taller and therefore closer to sunlight, which makes transpiration higher a valid physiological difference on the different rates of transpiration</p>
<p>Umm… to an extent. Relating only height, I’m not sure that is valid. But if you said maybe because one plant was lower and thus was covered by more shade, that could be valid…</p>
<p>And does anyone thing there will really be a +10 to a 5 on the new curve? 105 instead of 95?? That sounds exceptionally harsh to me. Of course it is all just speculation…</p>
<p>DON’T TALK ABOUT IT FOR 48 HOURS! AHHHH! </p>
<p>Even if the chances are so unlikely, do you want to be the person who gets their test scores voided and possibly becoming ineligible to take ANY more tests again? And that will probably show up when you’re trying to go to college!</p>
<p>Just don’t take chances! I told a lot of people this today! Why would you risk a whole years worth of work for a few words that could have waited?!</p>
<p>Well halemcck, if someone has a username they don’t commonly use on other websites then it sure would be awfully difficult for them to cancel the scores for that particular person… I’d say it is a… non legitimatized fear. It would cost the Collegeboard a lot of money to go around cancelling scores. To conduct proof on such a case they’d require IP logs from collegeconfidential, information records from the ISP company if they are willing to distribute them, etc…</p>
<p><strong>Knocks on wood anyway</strong></p>
<p>Lol.</p>
<p>And thechampionon was never heard of again. Legend says he was taken by College Board to their jail cell, where he lives even today… o.O</p>
<p>i’ve got a couple of hypothetical questions 
if a student found a new eukaryote in a lake, would 4 of its organelles be nucleus, mitochondria, smooth/rough er, and ribosomes?
and would a good example of intracellular digestion be hydra, and one of extracellular digestion be earthworms?</p>
<p>You know why they got Osama right? He spoke of a multiple choice question from not only the AP Biology exam years ago, but also the AP Physics B exam. </p>
<p>I also knew a man who was on the brink of graduating medical school. The night before graduation he discussed the multiple choice from an AP exam long ago… the college board heard and notified the universities… The man lost of bachelor’s degree and had to redo his his entire college education…</p>
<p>And kevinivek, I don’t know why you would ask!, but yes those four organelles should be found in that eukaryote… And hydra digest food extracellularly not intra… :\ Earthworms do extracellularly though.</p>
<p>so lets just say the test happens to ask about prezygotic barriers, do behavioral and temporal isolation count?</p>
<p>do you know how many points will be deducted off if we got the intra and extra mixed up? two/ three points?</p>
<p>Is a grasshopper intracellular and a sea sponge extracellular? :/</p>
<p>^I had no clue about those processes. I guessed worm for both, and then tried bsing the process… I hope they weren’t worth too many points.</p>
<p>how do you guys think they’ll do the rubrics? we know there are 12 points available for every question (but only 10 are counted), so i bet they’re divided something like this:
1- a is worth 6 (8 possible points, 4 counted), b is worth 3, and c is worth 3
2. a is worth 4, b is worth 4, c is worth 4
3. a is worth 4, c is worth 4, c is worth 4
4. a is worth 2, b is worth 6, c is worth 4
Do you guys think that’ sounds right, or do you have any other ideas how it could go?</p>
<p>^coolkid lawl. hypothetically i <em>would have</em> said mechanical XD. try coming up with an intelligent way to say “it don’t fit!”. but hypothetically yours work</p>
<p>forgiveandforget i feel ya. i would guess hypothetically if a question had that each would be worth a point. </p>
<p>i was hoping for a really generous curve… but it seems everybody here feels they did about the same on it. sigh… no guessing penalty might hurt us this year!</p>
<p>… toystoryfan, grasshopper is extra. sea sponge is also extra.</p>
<p>and to the person before toystory, i would imagine you would lose all points if you mixed them up and also got each definition wrong. maybe partial credit if you had correct, yet switched definitions… and by definitions i mean descriptions of the processes.</p>