<p>AP Biology, AP Chemistry, AP Physics C</p>
<p>Easy-Hard: Bio, Chem, Physics C</p>
<p>(Easiest to Hardest)
Bio
Physics
Chem </p>
<p>easy to hard: bio, chem, physics C</p>
<p>I personally have only taken AP Bio and AP Chem. AP Bio is a lot more reading heavy than AP Chem, so it’s a lot easier to do well in AP Bio if you just memorize a lot of terms.</p>
<p>(Easiest to Hardest) Bio, Chem, Physics</p>
<p>Physics C, Chemistry, Bio
Obviously an electrical engineering major.</p>
<p>they are all easy.
ap physics just math
ap chem, well it’s easier than adkins chem.
ap bio, now that’s just heavy on memorization.</p>
<p>It depends if math comes easy to you or not. If so:
Bio, Chem, Physics</p>
<p>I even asked my teachers their opinion on this a few months ago - they all agree bio is definitely the easiest and physics is the hardest.</p>
<p>Memorization is easy, but it’s a drain on brain cells and doesn’t feel all too good when you cram it in. Physics on the other hand is more of an active use of the brain which makes it fun to learn and easy to retain. </p>
<p>AP Bio- This is probably the easiest class out of all three. I took it as a freshman. What you need to do is just really memorize and understand processes, but that’s not difficult because you know most of the processes–it will just go more in depth.
AP Chem-This is in the middle. If you have a passion for chemistry, it will be a piece of cake. If you’re good in science, you just have to have a very excellent foundation as a chem honors student, know your periodic table basics, know your compounds, and be efficient at labs. It’s pretty fun, which makes it less hard.
AP Physics-- This is a lot of math, understanding, and concepts you have to just know. It’s less memorization and more active usage of what you learn. It’s considered pretty difficult. </p>