<p>Okay, right now I am taking this bs drafting class. So at the end of this semester, I will be switching to take a distance learning class. The AP's that I am looking at are between AP gov and politics, AP micro, AP macro.....can you tell me some things about the AP tests.....which one did you benefit from most? can you compare micro to macro please? which one is easier?, etc......thanks in advance!!!</p>
<p>I'd say if you have enough initiative do both micro and macro. They're both incredibly easy AP's. Comparative gov is hard, US gov is just a lot of memorization that's all.</p>
<p>Can you explain the difference between micro and macro regarding difficulty?......do I have to take both micro and macro for the AP exam?.....I know what economics is, and I have a pretty good foundation(audited a few classes at emory university).....but what do the courses mostly invlolve? meaning is it all memorization, etc...?</p>
<p>They're 2 seperate AP's. Micro is a tiny bit harder than macro because there's more to memorize. But honestly if you've audtied econ classes, take them both. If you're ever going to use your AP credit you need both to get out of an intro econ class anyways.</p>
<p>I'm in US gov: if you've had AP US His its incredibly easy and some of the stuff supplements on what you know, which is kind of cool.</p>
<p>Comp gov is not hard.</p>
<p>U.S. govt is SO easy. At least at my school it is. I would rather take micro personally.</p>
<p>Huh? It would seem micro is a bit easier because it's more intuitive (like gee, the marginal benefit of hiring that extra worker is negative: don't hire him!)</p>
<p>All those classes are extremely easy. I read through the AP gov prep book, and it was all stuff I learned in like elementary school. It's just basic memorization.</p>
<p>Economics is all just common sense, so it's not too hard. It's completely intuitive and completely logical. Anyone good at math will be good at economics.</p>