AP Chemistry forumla sheet?

<p>I saw somewhere that we only get the formula sheet and periodic table for the FRQ part...is this so??? I have been relying on it all year for mc; my teacher told us that we get to use it for all of the test too...</p>

<p>Do we get to use it for the entire test?</p>

<p>There is no formula sheet for the mc. That’s why its better to memorize, not all, but a good amount of the formulas. For the short response you get a formula sheet.</p>

<p>You can get it on collegeboard’s website- go to For Students, then AP, then to the Chem section. It is the first part of all of the past FRQs that you can look at. </p>

<p>For the mc you only get the periodic table.</p>

<p>oh shoot…
do you get the constants for the MC (like planck, faraday, etc?)</p>

<p>The only thing you get on the multiple choice is your periodic table. That’s all. No constant values, no standard reduction potential chart, no formulas.</p>

<p>Sometimes, on the multiple choice question itself it will GIVE you the constants/standard reduction potential–but you’re not going to get all the constants, etc.</p>

<p>For example, if the question asks you to determine the cell voltage of a cell with Rxn: A + B2+ –>B + A2+, they’re probably going to give you the standard reduction potential values of A/B.</p>

<p>that is unfortunate</p>

<p>Wow, no wonder people fail this exam lol</p>

<p>… I was under the impression we got formulas during the MC.</p>

<p>Don’t worry only the most basic of formulas are needed for pretty much all of the mc (unlike physics).</p>

<p>Ok good…you all scared me into thinking we didn’t get the periodic table even!</p>

<p>Are there 2 sections of MC and FRQ…w/ calc and one w/ out? Sorry, my teacher doesn’t care about the AP test in the least (which is fine with me because we got to do lots of labs and learn cool stuff that’s not in the curriculum. :smiley: )</p>

<p>There’s one section of M/C w/o calc.</p>

<p>Then there’s 2 sections of free response, the first three questions you get to use calculator on and that’s it. Then you put your calc away and you answer the last 3 questions w/o calc.</p>