Enough for a 5?

<p>I've been self studying AP Chem, cuz my school offers no teacher. </p>

<p>I have basically 4 units to go: Gases, Kinetics, Equilibria (solution, normal and Acid Base)</p>

<p>I found a set of videos from Rene Mccormick, who writes the AP exam ( here: <a href="http://apchemistrynmsi.wikispaces.co...ctional+videos%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://apchemistrynmsi.wikispaces.co...ctional+videos&lt;/a> ) if anyone wants them, and am planning on watching all the videos for the units I haven't done yet.</p>

<p>I really, really, reallyyyyy need a 5, or I'm absolutely screwed. Do you guys think this is sufficient? I'll supplement with Barrons and maybe take a practice exam the day before the test.</p>

<p>I also have 5 steps to 5 and PR that I got from a friend.</p>

<p>Thanks! </p>

<p>Oh, and if it makes any difference: I'm writing my SAT on May 5th. Math is going well, CR should be fine, writing -> essays work, reviewing grammar.</p>

<p>Possibly, if you’ve mastered the other subjects well, getting a 5 should be no problem. I believe the test is May 7 – only 1 1/2 weeks left.</p>

<p>I’m also taking AP Chem this year, but the entire test is futile (I’m going to MIT next yr, which doesn’t accept AP Chem for credit, regardless of score).</p>

<p>If I were you, I’d focus the majority of my time on equilibrium - both acid and base and regular. There’s always about 8 MC questions and 1 FRQ over it.</p>