AP Classes based on difficulty.

<p>I will go homework/workload wise rather than my own bias on each subject:</p>

<p>Physics B
Chemistry
Calculus BC
English Lit
US Gov/Pol
US History</p>

<p>AP Calculus AB
AP Environmental Science
AP Biology
AP World History</p>

<p>I literally just posted this on my blog today, this is the order of difficulty if you were to self-study; i didn’t self study them all though. I took the class for about half.</p>

<p>Psychology
Environmental Science
Human Geography
Government
Statistics
Language and Composition
Macroeconomics
Comparative Politics
Microeconomics
Literature and Composition
Physics B
Biology
Physics C Mechanics
Calculus
Chemistry
US History
European History
Computer Science
Art History
Physics C Electricity and Magnetism</p>

<p>AP Psychology
AP US History
AP Chemistry</p>

<p>Hmmm…</p>

<p>Human Geography
Calculus AB
World History
Environmental Science</p>

<p>And yes, I did say APES was the hardest. The subject material was super easy, the whole thing is extremely easy to BS if you ask me, and the AP test too, but holy cow, I got a B+ in that class, and may get another one again…its insanity to get an A. Like, literally, not a single person got an A. And my class had about half of the top 10 people in my really competitice graduating class in my APES period!! My first B+ ever…>.<</p>

<p>Through junior year:
Calculus AB
Environmental Science
World History
Human Geography (Higher if this is your first AP class as a freshman without the WH/US hist background or study skills)
Chemistry
Art History
US History
Biology *
English Language and Composition
Physics B *
Biology and Physics were high because it was difficult cramming for two completely different subjects on the same weekend and the parts I did not cover were on the test–they had low percentages of showing up but they still appeared as FR questions</p>

<p>Tier 1 (fairly simple if you study, decent curves as well for the most part):
Human Geography
Pysch
Comp Gov
English Lit and Lang
US History
Euro History
World History
Statistics
Tier 2 (have to study, curves are usually pretty high, but for a reason)
Calculus AB
Calculus BC
Tier 3 (Effing insanity, *** is this test I don;t know any of this stuff)
Physics B
Physics C
Latin</p>

<p>Calc AB
Calc BC
USH
Computer Science
Human Geography
Chemistry
World History
Physics B</p>

<p>English language and composition
European history
Us history
Calc ab</p>

<ul>
<li>Calc was the only one I was truly challenged by, the other ones are kind of jokes in my school</li>
</ul>

<p>People overestimate the difficulty of Physics C.</p>

<p>Chem easiest, AP Euro hardest</p>

<p>^Don;t know whether you are joking or not</p>

<p>hotair, how is that a joke? One can be excellent at science yet have a hard time in social studies.</p>

<p>This thread should be based on how hard the overall exam is with proper studying and knowedge of the material. If you actually read your textbook and prepare for the Euro exam, it is not nearly as difficult, and in fact is fairly simple with a massive curve. I know Siemens Finalists come out of the AP chem exam shaking their heads and not having a clue what they were supposed to do or not having nearly enough time to do it. The exam itself is much harder based on what it tests</p>

<p>AP US History
AP Government
AP World History
AP English Composition
AP Spanish</p>

<p>AP Language tests are always hard for non-native speakers. but it wasn’t too bad. The rest are all easy. </p>

<p>Also, is AP Statistics really that easy?</p>

<p>Just a sophomore, so here’s my experiences so far…</p>

<p>Macroeconomics
Microeconomics
APUSH
English Lit</p>

<p>AP psychology,AP Spanish lang, AP world history, AP us history, AP human geo, AP eng lang. Believe it or not, hgap and eng lang are actually really hard in my school district.</p>

<p>For AP Stat if you actually study and aren;t like a lot of kids who have no idea what a normal distribution or a chi squared test is, then yes, it is incredibly easy. The exam has in my opinion been watered down significantly over the years, previous exams had much harder FRQs. For example, question 6, which is the frq worth the most points was usually pretty hard and involved significant knowledge of the underlying mechanics and rules of whatever was tested. When I took the exam in 2010, our major FRQ was literally just graphing.</p>

<p>AP Spanish
AP Spanish LiT
AP Eng Lang
APUSH
AP Physics B
AP Biology</p>

<p>Calc AB
Psych
Gov
APES
Eng. Lang
Physics B</p>

<p>easiest -> hardest</p>