<p>@SaraCo I agree. Though I didn’t study much, there was only like 20% of the stuff on the test that could be found directly from my Crash Course/Barron’s. Hoping for a 4 for National AP Scholar; it would be a godsend (along with a 4 on Calculus and Chemistry LOL).</p>
<p>Is it me or are all the AP tests getting harder? I think AP Human being this hard was a first? Whose idea in CB was this.</p>
<p>@RishabC297 I was stuck between the two, but the more I think about it, the more it seems to be poultry for me. Beef can be either feedlots or ranching, but poultry is only feedlots.</p>
<p>My textbook specifically mentions poultry farming and those broiler houses. Just saying. Not talking about questions.</p>
<p>Google ‘poultry farming aerial’</p>
<p>I live in a cow state. That’s not what the farms look like.</p>
<p>JUST TO REASSURE YOU GUYS I took the test last year, and I got a 3. I’m guessing that the multiple choice questions were similar-ish between the two tests, and I’m pretty sure that I totally bombed the MCQ’s, maybe got 50% right. My free response was a joke, it involved guessing blowing snow and it looks like they were about as difficult as this year’s. You guys are fine, APHG isn’t easy because of the course material but because of the generous curve.</p>
<p>I feel like I did terribly. I thought the FRQs were a lot easier than the MCQs…</p>
<p>Break of Bulk would be Beijing, as that is the place of high manufacturing at which things are broken down in bilk for international trade. Singapore focuses less on international export of manufactured goods.</p>
<p>Those MC questions were painful. Hopefully those last two FRQs can save my score… So glad I focused more on AP Government since studying for Human Geo would’ve been totally pointless.
Let’s hope the curve is in our favor guys! </p>
<p>I would talk about the exams and help you guys on some of the questions but after reading this <a href=“http://www.apreviewbooks.com/question.php?id=42&t=Can-I-talk-with-people-about-the-exam-once-I-”>http://www.apreviewbooks.com/question.php?id=42&t=Can-I-talk-with-people-about-the-exam-once-I-</a></p>
<p>I think the frq was pretty easy except for the results of superimposed boundary and mex-brazil model where I just bs about malquiladoras, buying stuff from poorer countries and then sell them to anglo-america, and some fighting and lost of heterozygous customs due to superimposed.</p>
<p>Hey guys, does anyone find any resources about the first frq? By the way, does anyone know what the google doc is about? I cannot open it. :-? </p>
<p>5!!</p>
<p>5 self-study! :D</p>
<p>5 as well! </p>
<p>5 as well! Freshman Year!</p>
<p>Congrats to everyone else who got a 5! </p>
<p>Advice to people taking it in 2015:
Study your models
If your school offers Schmoop, do the lessons
5 Steps to a 5 is my favorite HuG book (although it’s unnecessary if your teacher is good)
Don’t freak out on the FRQ’s. Don’t stress after the FRQ’s. </p>
<p>I felt like the FRQs were much easier than the multiple choice…does anyone know when the scoring guidelines will be released for 2014? I want to see what I possibly could have gotten…not that if really matters now…:P</p>
<p>I really though I got like a 2 or a 3… But I am so happy with my 5!!!</p>
<p>I got a 2 lol. What books did you guys use to study and how long did you study for? Just wondering! </p>
<p>@futureuclabruin My HuG teacher was really good at reviewing so I didn’t do much studying. I picked up 5 Steps to a 5 the weekend before the exam and read through it once (it’s really short). It does a good job at review and vocab, but it won’t teach you new material. It took me maybe 2-3 hours. </p>