<p>hello,
so i plan on taking SAT II chem in may.. and i was browsing through the princeton review book for it..
are the practice questions in the back very similar to the actual test?
because i felt the material (the review part) was very simple and so were the questions in the practice tests..</p>
<p>i wasn't really sure if maybe it was a very brief overview of what you had to know.. or.. the material itself is actually much more easier than i thought..
btw i'm taking AP chem in school right now.. so maybe im so use to the harder questions in AP class?</p>
<p>please help me!
thanks!</p>
<p>I'd also like to know this...</p>
<p>Use the McGraw Hill Book. I'm using that and my friend used it and he got a 780. The SAT II chem only covers one or two topics that were not covered in my honors chem class which I took last year. These include entropy, enthalpy, and gibbs free energy. Other than that, AP Chem is just way too advanced; you're exposed to too much, most of which you won't be tested on.</p>
<p>If you think PR book is easy, the mcgraw hill book is a joke. The PR questions are easy, and they're similar to the actual tests (from what I heard). But the real problem is getting them all done in time. Well... mine at least.</p>
<p>does anyone have any opinions on the kaplan book?</p>
<p>I used PR for physics and got a 780, so I assume that it should be just as good or better for chem, since (you might disagree) physics is a bit harder than chem.</p>
<p>Or what about Sparknotes?</p>
<p>PR is the best for chem. It contains only what you need to know for the test and it covers it well.</p>
<p>If you're in AP chem, the SAT II will seem like a joke.</p>
<p>Well that's good :)</p>