SAT II Biology- PLZ answer!

<li><p>It appears that the princeton review and barrons seem to be the most well liked around here. The test is in exactly 2 weeks and I have already taken a bio class this year so I just need a good refresher and pointers on a few things I never learned but need to learn in detail. BARRONS OR PRINCETON REV? I cant do both, so please try to choose one…and why? </p></li>
<li><p>I know the the difference between Bio E and Bio M…but is one particularly harder than the other? And I’ve noticed that for these review books, they don’t point out which chapter is for which subject, so should I just read the entire book and take both the E and M tests and see which I do best on? Or is there a faster way to figure out which one I should take? What did you do/are planning on doing in this case?</p></li>
</ol>

<p>Oh and if there is any other book suggestion feel free to include.
THANKS!!</p>

<p>PRINCETON REVIEW!!!! 2 800s say that their scores are better than my 730. This is mostly advice my guy friends at school have given me. I've ignored it and well, ended up with that 730, when I studied harder than both of them combined. Study effectively. Lesson learned. </p>

<p>Here's our thoughts:</p>

<p>Barron's overprepares you.</p>

<p>PR is also a great refresher. </p>

<p>Doesn't really matter E or M. You should prepare for both. On test day you can decide which one you want based on which section's questions you know better. To my knowledge I no review book explicitly split the chapters down to E or M. (I've looked at Sparknotes, Barrons, Kaplan, Patterson and PR in case you're wondering). </p>

<p>Oh I forgot. Most people chose E. In terms of scoring, the M scores tend to have a higher percentile than the E scores. Overall it doesn't matter which one you pick, since the score is likely to be the same. No, one is not harder than the other. The M curves are rumored to be "better"? but that's not true since that only affects your percentile. (This last statement was subjective btw). </p>

<p>I used multiple practice books and stuff, but none of it helped. Based on REAL expereince, I've noticed that the SAT questions were the most similar to Princeton Review questions. I should have memorized the data there, but I didn't memorize the simple charts and got those questions WRONG. </p>

<p>I would suggest you first analytically tear apart the Princeton Book, thoroughly (roughly 3x). Then I would take as many practice tests as I can get my hands on. Score them. See how well you did. GO OVER YOUR MISTAKES. This is the part most people miss. If you get something wrong and you don't go over it, you'll get it wrong again and again. Most likely this will trip you up on the actual test. </p>

<p>PLEASE, PLEASE NEVER use Patterson tests. They're often very difficult and full of information YOU DON'T NEED TO KNOW. Plus out of the multiple review books I've looked at, this book had the most errors. Kaplan tests are also equally misleading. They make you feel good, but they're very easy and very unrealistic. </p>

<p>In addition to a review book, you will need a textbook to crossreference reviewbook facts that are often wrong. In fact I've never seen an error-free book before. Review books tend to have a lot of errors because test-prep companies do not take the time to hire good editors. One of my teachers who formerly taught for Kaplan said, when he was getting hired, he was forced to take that their practice test, even though he had a PhD. He took their test and scored a 780. He said that can't be and showed them the error, and Kaplan knew. They also DIDN'T care. lol. </p>

<p>Textbooks on the other hand, have hundreds of college professors editting them. So it is almost NEVER wrong. I used Campbell. Me encanta el texto de Campbell. It reads very well with lots of pictures. Plus its THE TEXTBOOK for Biology. It is likely that'll be the same textbook for AP Bio and college as well. </p>

<p>This should take you two weeks of intense prepping.
That's all I have to say. </p>

<p>and Good Luck. </p>

<p>P.S. Feel free to PM me about questions. I'm planning on retaking it in October. Me encanta biologia.</p>

<p>thanks hyunsook...</p>

<p>Is there anyone else that can convince me on either books? I would really appreciate all advice. I heard its better to be over prepared than under by the extra information and harder tests in Barrons, but at the same time I heard that Princeton review does a better job in reviewing the material and providing accurate tests. So any more ideas?</p>

<p>Barron's is all you need.
i've read over the book 2x
only using that knowledge, i've taken Sparknote's and Barron's tests: all 750+</p>

<p>I haven't had a Biology class since 9th grade, so i thank Barron for the scores.</p>

<p>I'm spending today at Barnes and Nobles to read PR's Biology book.
ill tell you how i feel about it when i come back lol</p>