SAT II U.S History Practice tests?

<p>I'm in APUSH now and I plan to take SAT II US history this May, right before the AP test. I have AMSCO and REA, which both have a very detailed review,and now I need some practice tests for the SAT. Is the collegeboard U.S&World History book good? Or if I study well for the AP I should be fine with multiple choices in SAT? Thanks.</p>

<p>I imagine much of your AP test preparation will transfer, but just in case SparkNotes has some good free ones online.</p>

<p>[SparkNotes:</a> SAT Subject Test: U.S. History: Test Center](<a href=“http://testprep.sparknotes.com/testcenter/sat2/history/]SparkNotes:”>http://testprep.sparknotes.com/testcenter/sat2/history/)</p>

<p>The CollegeBoard one is the real test (old ones) so I’d say they will be helpful.</p>

<p>I tried out tons of prep books. In my opinion, McGraw-Hill was the worst while Barron’s and Kaplan were decent. Princeton Review, to me, was way too easy. I got 800 on the tests compared to 750~ on the other books. Maybe it’s because the questions are written better but try all of them out!</p>

<p>The crash course book I don’t know the company but I read that after practicing with the two tests in the CollegeBoard one and the words seemed to be verbatim for some of the things :slight_smile: My only problem with that review book (really short read it in less than an hour) is its division into different categories. Personally, years and eras are the way to group things for memorizing historical things. Years!! Most important</p>

<p>Sparknotes is always a great resource for practice, and I think it should be sufficient.</p>

<p>If you want extra material though, you can check out this compilation of tests: [US</a> History - College Revolution Philippines-Free UPCAT and ACET Practice Tests](<a href=“http://collegerev.■■■■■■■■■■/us-history.html]US”>http://collegerev.■■■■■■■■■■/us-history.html)</p>

<p>the only real one I found and did was in the official collegeboard History Subject Tests Book. If you want to do well, read through Amsco now, then read through a prep book 1 or 2 weeks before the test, then do the practice test a couple days before. I did this, and got a 770 without too much trouble (funny thing is, I only got a 4 on AP lol)</p>