<p>hey..
can anyone taking physics B send a test to me.. somehow?
:)
thanks</p>
<p>I got 5's on both Economics exams by self-studying only the Princeton Review book, so I highly recommend that. Most of it is just memorizing a lot of vocabulary words. I took Psychology in college, and I'd imagine that it would be similar.</p>
<p><a href="mailto:the.rising.empire06@gmail.com">the.rising.empire06@gmail.com</a>
can anyone send me an AP physics B exam, please?</p>
<p>dont self-study science... especially lab sciences..
you will screw yourself over...</p>
<p>i recommend independent studying:</p>
<p>AP Govt
AP Psych
AP World
AP Econ</p>
<p>AP World is definitely independent study. I actually really enjoyed taking AP Psych because the concepts becomes a lot more interesting when it involves class activities, discussions, etc.</p>
<p>I've been told before that if I have the drive to, and as long as I look over the "Lab" sections in text books and review books, I would be fine independently studying sciences.</p>
<p>Are there any classes where class participation is a must?</p>
<p>ap chemistry.
there is no way u can self study it unless you're ultra einstein</p>
<p>Okay, now I need some names of the textbooks you used in CLASS. I'm sure those review books don't teach you very in-depth, so titles please!</p>
<p>For bio, i was rather fond of Life: The Science of Biology. Though i havent taken the AP yet, i have gotten A percentages on released exams, so there ya go. And from what I have seen, lab sections in Review Books are awful. I read them before a practice test once, and i got nothing out of it. On the bio exam, they actually require you to design an experiment(aka copy the procedures from a lab, or tweak it in some way). Prep books dont teach that. So if you still want to ind. study a lab science I either recomend that you dont do it, or if you do to buy a lab manual(for bio... i dont know how much the other APs are dependent on labs)</p>
<p>Does anyone have any recommendations for AP Spanish Language?</p>