<p>I'm a -us citizen abroad- high school sophomore, and I know that the taking the SAT2 in biology is recommended after you finish the course that covers the material. Anyway, the curriculum is different here so do you think I could fill in gaps on my own with let's say, the princeton review book, for content that i simply won't learn in biology at school? I've taken biology last year and am taking an accelerated class this year (not a really advanced class, honestly)</p>
<p>Yes, I've even heard of students that never really took biology in school, but read through a couple practice books, took the practice tests, and were able to get very high scores.</p>
<p>Great, thank you..do they explain basic things too? like how to incorporate mathematics into biological processes (or something like that..sorry I haven't started it's just what I saw on the collegeboard website)</p>
<p>The whole mathematical thing into the biological process is just about the ability to draw conclusions from data tables and graphs. 1/3 of the questions on the test have to do with drawing conclusions from presented data. This is the math they are talking about.</p>
<p>Read through princeton review, it has all of the information that you will need. you really do not have to worry about the math there, it's all about how to read charts and graphs, and almost no actual calculations. (Maybe a question that involves dividing by two at most :))</p>