<p>Ddddddddddddddd</p>
<p>not for you</p>
<p>Hah, that was pretty harsh. Do you like bio? If you like it, or are good at it, you will probably do well on the test, but if you take it solely because you think it's easy, I can guarantee that you will be disappointed.</p>
<p>you don't necessarily have to like it to do well. But, if you don't study and just take it, you are going to be very disappointed.</p>
<p>The bio SAT II is not easy. That said, if you're good at memorization and enjoy the subject, it might be easy for you (in that vein, I personally found it easy, but a lot of people do not).</p>
<p>hell no...it's not easy. You have to take it after an honors bio or aP bio class, or you will forget most of the in depth details. I personally remember the concepts but none of the hard facts. I would do horrible if I took it right now, even if I refreshed it a bit. I got a 740, and that was with the reviewing for AP.</p>
<p>yeah, its easy. be smart and take ecology instead, though.</p>
<p>hello I am new around here but I want to know whether molecular biology is hard. I am taking SAT II biology this coming Saturday and I was thinking of molecular instead of ecology . If ecology is easier , then I should choose it instead,maybe.</p>
<p>Personally, I hate chemistry so I thought ecology would be easier, but when taking practice tests, I decided to take molecular. Molecular was more based on processes like photosynthesis and cells, stuff you already should have gone over a little in your class, but ecology required memorization of different types of environments and stuff that I wasn't willing to learn for the first time.</p>
<p>I took M in June, and for me it was pretty easy because I studied for it a month after the AP, but just know that it's not what you're better at. I'm terrible at chem, but I was able to get the basics down that were required for molecular. Btw, I got a 790.</p>
<p>It is not that easy. don't go in with that mindset because you WILL be disappointed.</p>
<p>what are the basics required for molecular part?Is it just photosynthesis and respiration?And questions from genetics are really hard, especially those that involve making predictions of offsprings. Does anybody have any suggestions for handling such questions?</p>
<p>I'm pretty sure that would be mostly on the ecology test (offspring/genetics). For molecular, you also need to know about, well, cells, organelles, and stuff like protein synthesis, translation/transcription/etc, cell cycles, all that good stuff. They might also throw some stuff on there about anatomy and organs and organ function, like the kidneys.</p>
<p>Anyway for genetics problems, just know the basic ratios. Any monohybrid cross (heterozygous x heterozygous) will have a genotypic ratio of 1:2:1. Any dihybrid cross will be 9:3:3:1. For anything else, either memorize it if it's simple (it saves time) or know how to draw a punnet square.</p>