<p>Does anyone know where I can get old multiple choice questions? I'm in desperate need and have been searching for hours, literally.</p>
<p>Haha--me too, with limited success. I did just spend an hour at B&N taking about 20 MC questions from the Barrons, PR, REA, Kaplan's, Five Steps to a Five, and Cliff's books (I have no life, I know), so here are my two cents:</p>
<p>If you've exhausted the one on the College Board Euro course description, get (or creatively acquire) the Barrons book. It has the best tests (in resembling the actual exam/College Board course description MC questions) of all the review books, IMO. If you've exhausted that one, get the PR book, though the first test is a LOT better than the second in PR.</p>
<p>Thanks, I can probably get my hands on a PR / Barron's book. Do you know how accurate the practice tests from the Sparknotes Powerpack are? I've taken the one online and one from the book, and they're really kicking my ass.</p>
<p>From the AP exam compilations that we took in class, Sparknotes doesn't really resemble them, because the AP exams have a lot more trend questions (vs. questions about an obscure Catholic Reformation Movement, etc.)</p>
<p>Oh yeah, go to the REA index and find the two pages that mention population; there's a LOT of population questions, according to my teacher.</p>
<p>Haha, good. I'd rather memorize trends than hundreds of terms.</p>
<p>Which one is REA?</p>
<p>REA is the thick, square book.</p>
<p>I might have to rescind what I said about obscure questions not being on the AP exam. On the practice one we took today, there was a question about the "Grand Tour," which is apparently a holiday that the English gentry took in the 18th century. I thought it was referring to the Great Embassy Tour, but then I looked at the answer choices. :D Even with our billions of pages of notes, we had not gotten to that. Definitely caught be off guard.</p>
<p>Haha, I don't think I know what either of those are. Actually, I'm pretty hazy about anything that happened before the first world war.</p>
<p>REA... I think have it then. Is it Modern European History? Do people actually read through that brick?</p>
<p>I know my old AP Euro teacher just completely stuffed all of his unit exams with AP Questions. Our practice exam was an old AP Euro test. Shouldn't your teacher do that?</p>
<p>Ha. My teacher doesn't know **** about the AP exam. His exams are entirely based on his lectures, and his lectures are entirely based on random anecdotes and facts he's compiled over the years. We spent a week discussing the current US presidential election because he felt like it.</p>
<p>My teacher didn't give multiple choice questions except on the first quarter exam, the semester exam, and the practice test.</p>
<p>Our unit tests have social/economic/cultural/intellectual questions from the book (we take notes on it for homework), and the 20(!) pages or so of notes that result from her lectures on political/diplomatic events. They always have true/false questions, fill-in-the-blanks, IDs, and an essay; I think the specific factual information they test (and how the tests test ANYTHING that was covered in the unit, forcing us to learn our notes really well) really help with the more trend-focused questions on the AP exam, because we have details from which to draw inferences.</p>
<p>Starting second semester, we had review quizzes that took, literally, lines from the textbook turned into true/false and fill-in-the-blank questions. Then, we had a similar test on Ch. 1-5 of the Viault book.</p>
<p>So, in short, people do read Modern European History, but my teacher told us that it lacks the social/economic/cultural/intellectual stuff on the exam.</p>
<p>HOWEVER, that's not the REA book, which is an even larger brick:</p>
<p>Have fun! :D</p>