<p>Ones from the 1969s multiple choice are insane...anyone agree?...The ones on the PR are just tricky, but these are really hard lol</p>
<p>Those look pretty much identical to the problems on most of my teacher’s tests.</p>
<p>I think the difficulty is about the same as recent tests.</p>
<p>damn…really got to study now.</p>
<p>lol I feel the recent exams are harder than the old ones…</p>
<p>I feel the same way xxsteelxx…</p>
<p>hmm. I guess if the exams are harder, that would explain why the curve for Calculus is lower than decades ago.</p>
<p>I’ve been practicing a lot of the FRQs from the past few years and they seem to be getting a lot easier now that I am recognizing the patterns with similar questions from one year to the next. I also did a set of practice MC from 1998 and it didn’t seem too bad. Maybe practice actually makes you better, what a concept. :D</p>
<p>well i second that</p>
<p>on a sidenote, I’ve seen several multiplicity problems on the older exams… like point of inflection. For example when you have an even multiplicity the signs do not change when the graph passes through the critical point, thus showing a monotonous increase or decrease. You have to look at the odd multiplicities where the graphs actually cross the critical points so that the sign changes. Thus an odd multiplicity would make an inflection point. Same applies for relative min/max.</p>