<p>Natives make it harder for non-natives to score high, as the natives' high scores counteract the non-natives' low scores.</p>
<p>
[quote]
There not quite "notes" and everyone probably knows about them, but I found this site helpful on a few occasions.</p>
[/quote]
</a>
This site seems really good for APUSH. I took a practice test back in March and scored 33/80 on the MC. Will watching these video help me get 45+/80? I'm not really that good in history especially in APUSH.</p>
<p>I'm not sure what this really goes under, but it has good lectures with narration. <a href="http://www.hippocampus.org%5B/url%5D">www.hippocampus.org</a></p>
<p>As exam time nears, I thought I'd bump up this thread.....</p>
<p>Any APCG links?????
Please??</p>
<p>that wikipedia book thing- AWESOME review for french! I'm brushin up on conjugations now :D</p>
<p>Yeah, it's good that you brought that up, missybear. Wikibooks offer an extensive amount of information on virtually any subject you can imagine. It goes so far into detail on everything. Browse through the list of books, and I'm sure you can find something that would help you.</p>
<p>howcome nobody gives a crap about music theory?</p>
<p>Chinese? Thx!</p>
<p>Uh, I think that if you aren't a native speaker of Chinese, you're pretty much screwed if you're looking to self study.</p>
<p>this might be a silly question but would studying for APs help SAT subject tests since they are related?</p>
<p>
[quote]
this might be a silly question but would studying for APs help SAT subject tests since they are related?
[/quote]
</p>
<p>No. They are usually pretty different. Obviously, some of the exams are similar (if you et a 5 in English Lit, you could get a 750+ on the English Lit SAT II) but most are pretty different.</p>
<p>Of course they will help, but studying an AP alone will not suffice for the SAT subject test since the two have different focuses. Thus, they are related and they do complement each other, but I would advise studying for both tests (aka doing both the prep books for the subject test and the AP as opposed to relying on prepping for just one and hoping to ace both).</p>
<p>for Biology, US History, and conceptual subjects, yes.</p>
<p>for Chemistry and more mathematical subjects, yes to a degree, but you should still do some practice tests and maybe go through a prep book for the SAT II. (definitely prep for the AP though)</p>
<p>for Math IIC versus AP Calculus, they focus on entirely different things. prep for both.</p>
<p>the other subjects/subject tests i'm not entirely sure about.</p>
<p>another bump</p>
<p>a music theory site???? anyone???? it would be greatly appreciated!!</p>
<p>AP Comp Gov site anyone?</p>
<p>Algebra
American Government (AP)
Biology (AP)
Calculus (AP)
Calculus (Spanish)
Environmental Science (AP)
Physics (AP) - I guess B & C
Psychology (AP)
Religion
US History (AP)</p>
<p>By the way, this website is a part of the MIT Opensource thing</p>
<p>the address is: HippoCampus</a> - Homework and Study Help - Free help with your algebra, biology, environmental science, American government, US history, physics and religion homework</p>
<p>Comparative Gov: I know this isn't a website, but</p>
<p>this book is truly amazing. It took me a few hours to read the whole thing the night before and I got a 5. And I wouldn't get it from Amazon right now; it seems the cheapest one is $195 (I got mine for $4.86) :D</p>
<p>i disagree. I was going to get pr b/c their books are best 99% of the time, but My physics teacher-who's absolutely AMAZING- MADE us get Barrons. He said it was the best book he's ever seen for the ap, and hes in his 60's......He's going to make the book required next year, along w/ the normal textbook.</p>