<p>nvm... ...</p>
<p>^ Yes. As a college student, I tell my friend how I would go through the cirumulm of every course in the Fall semester over my summer time. I use my summer for this. </p>
<p>You should check the general ideas. If you have time you can look at online lecture notes, or borrow a book from the library.</p>
<p>But you don’t want to learn everything on your own. </p>
<p>Also, it is very strongly advice that in college one should have read the materials before each class. Of course, we don’t have do it because of time conflict.</p>
<p>AP chemistry is pretty hard if you don’t keep up. There are so much to cover!
Look at the AP Chem review book from a library.</p>
<p>Relax in a summer. Spend time with friends. You will need it. Gen. Chem is the easiest out of Med School required science classes anyway. D. did not have AP Chem., was not offerred at her school, she sailed thru Gen. Chem. Relaxation is very important, it will prepare you for successful year at college much more than worrying about classes. D. never studied in a summer, nor she ever took summer classes.</p>
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In high school, I never did jack in my AP Chemistry class, barely learned much (partly on me, mostly on my horrible teacher who, since being a previous professor, didn’t teach much and expected everyone to learn by reading the text - which I didn’t (in high school)). With a horribly weak knowledge of general chem, I ended up cramming hard with Barron’s AP Chem the 2 weeks before the AP exam and got a 5; so maybe it’s not too hard. I would say college chem is a different level. Reading your text makes everything a breeze - doubled with practice problems.</p>