<p>Anyone else taking it? Unfortunately, this has been my study hall all year. I am trying to determine if cramming tonight will somehow get me a 3. It doesn't seem like too many people take this test seriously.</p>
<p>Suggestions, comments?</p>
<p>Anyone else taking it? Unfortunately, this has been my study hall all year. I am trying to determine if cramming tonight will somehow get me a 3. It doesn't seem like too many people take this test seriously.</p>
<p>Suggestions, comments?</p>
<p>Yes, I'm taking it also, and am taking it seriously. I plan on spending tonight cramming like crazy with my REA book. If you have a review book or a textbook, I'd review some major concepts in that, like global warming, depletion of the ozone layer, air/water pollution, biochemical cycles, energy alternatives, population demographics/models, etc. You may also want to try going on <a href="http://www.collegeboard.com%5B/url%5D">www.collegeboard.com</a> under the AP Environmental Science section and doing some practice questions from the past few years. Good luck!</p>
<p>may help as well, you can go through the chapters and take practice quizes which are useful in studying as well as review vocab and outlines.</p>
<p>My teacher has looked over all the past essays on collegeboard.com. Here are some of her predictions for the frqs:</p>
<ol>
<li>Agriculture- no till farming, etc.</li>
<li>Mining</li>
<li>Landfills (structural components and their roles)</li>
<li>Food webs/food chains</li>
<li>Soil Degradation- overgrazing, deforestation, and agricultural activites</li>
</ol>
<p>Anyone else have any predictions?</p>