<p>can you?????????</p>
<p>Of course not. What kind of ridiculous question is that. You are never allowed to discuss multiple choice, and not allowed to discuss Free Response for two days. That's all; everything else is allowed. No where does it say that you are not allowed to express something so minute as your opinion of the difficulty.</p>
<p>Hehe, and even if it weren't "allowed", how are they going to catch you?</p>
<p>Here's a better rule: Don't do anything stupid and you'll be fine.</p>
<p>"Here's a better rule: Don't do anything stupid and you'll be fine."</p>
<p>That's pretty much a general rule for life.</p>
<p>However, the following is printed in those announcements at the top of this forum:</p>
<p>UNALLOWABLE CONTENT
1. The articulation of multiple-choice exam questions and answers.
2. The articulation of free-response questions* within 2 days of the exam in which they appear.</p>
<p>EXAMPLES OF ALLOWABLE CONTENT
1. A general discussion of topics on the exam.
2. Comments on how well the course covered those topics.
3. Comments related to preparation.
4. Comments on how well the student thinks s/he did.
5. Comments on the difficulty of the exam.</p>
<p>So yes, discussing difficulty is fair game.</p>
<p>Don't teachers use old tests for practice? Is that not allowed?</p>
<p>CB releases MC's from each AP test every 5 years (wow, thats a lot of acronyms), so that's what teachers use to practice. But even with those, there are restrictions on how teachers can distribute them. They arn't allowed to post them online or distribute them electronically (which is why CB can force lots of websites with old MC sections to remove them)</p>