<p>I'm debating as to which one I should take. I've had both for 3 years (+AP Chem) but I can do equally well on both I think. However, one thing that does concern me is that the chemistry doesnt seem as straightforward (True, True, Correct Explantion) part. And i saw the sparknotes curves whereas Chemistry gets a 1 question curve... physics has a 10 question curve. Is physics truly THAT hard?</p>
<p>Overall, which is a easier test to get an 800 on? Physics I assume?</p>
<p>Not necessarily. The physics test is quite broad. I've taken both the chemistry and the physics tests. 800 physics, 660 chemistry. I didn't study for the chemistry test besides a quick review of some of my old notes and working a couple problems from the textbook. I could have probably scored well into the 700s on chem if I'd tried but frankly I've got more important things to worry about at the moment.</p>
<p>I did study regularly for the entire month preceding the Physics test.</p>
<p>Basically, there is no such thing as an easy SAT II. Forget the curves, choose whichever subject you are best at and study hard. Also, choose the subject you most ENJOY studying; you'll get more out of it (and score higher). Sure it's true that you can miss more questions and still get an 800 on Physics, but once you fall below 800 you lose points quickly as with any other SAT. Remember, over 90% of students who take the Physics test do NOT score 800.</p>
<p>As for the T,F,CE questions, just practice and you'll get the hang of them.</p>
<p>Sparknotes if just bad at curving and the TTCE is easy to get used to. I haven't taken physics yet but I got an 800 on chemistry and one of my friends who got an 800 in physics said it's just as easy chem ( she got an 800 on that too).</p>
<p>naidu90--> which book(s) did you use for chem and which book(s) did your friend use for physics</p>