<p>Here's what I've done: I've read both 5 steps to a 5 and PR review books, taken 4 real practice MC exams (I get an average of 15-20 wrong out of 80). </p>
<p>I've written ZERO essays over the year (my teacher never made us). But I've always been told that as long as I know the material, the essay-writing will fall into place. I'm a good essay writer in general. </p>
<p>I have AP Physics on Monday and I will skip school on Tuesday and do a WHOLE day of review for APUSH. What should I do? What can teach me the most in the shortest amount of time? Timelines, vocab lists, what? Or just more MC practice and FRQ brainstorming? </p>
<p>How do I make the most out of that 1 day of review?</p>
<p>Thanks!</p>
<p>Read the essential content for 24 hours. No joke and mon</p>
<p>Hey, send me a message I want to speak with you about studying for APUSH</p>
<p>Your not really in bad shape. And what you’ve been told is right. You dont need to practice the essays at all. I self studied using the REA Apush crash course book about 2 weeks before the test (didnt take ap class) and got a 5, so I highly recommend looking over that at your local barnes and nobles or other bookstore.</p>
<p>I can’t get anymore books before the exam. No good bookstore nearby, I’d have to order online. </p>
<p>Online resources would be great. </p>
<p>Does this sound good: Do a long extensive vocab list, and then read over past FRQ essays after brainstorming about each topic?</p>
<p>As long as you have a good thesis and good outside information, your essays should be decent.</p>
<p>Also, don’t be that guy that overloads their essay with SAT vocab. The essay graders prefer actual information. Sorry if that’s really obvious to you, but a lot of people still do it anyway.</p>
<p>Honestly, read through PR again. As long as you can get 15-20 MC wrong on the test, your essays can be crappy and you’ll still get a 5.</p>