Self Study AP Chemistry

<p>This year, I'm self studying for AP Chemistry. I want a revised 2014 - 2015 prep book. Not the 2013 - 2014 book, since the writers hadn't seen a real AP test at that point of time. I can't find any 2014 - 2015 books no Amazon. Can someone forward me a link or recommend me a title? Thanks! </p>

<p>what do you mean by “since the writers hadn’t seen a real AP test at that point of time”</p>

<p>This year they revamped the AP chem test. As such the OP feels that the material in a 2013-2013 book probably won’t fully prepare him/her for the test as much as a revised 2014-2015 edition would.</p>

<p>I only found these two books</p>

<p><a href=“5 Steps to a 5 AP Chemistry, 2014-2015 Edition Edition:5th ISBN:9780071803731 - TextbookRush”>Bad Request (400) - TextbookRush;

<p><a href=“http://www.booksamillion.com/p/Kaplan-AP-Chemistry/David-Wilson/9781618652478?gclid=CJPZ-oTRpcACFSdp7AodaU0AoQ”>http://www.booksamillion.com/p/Kaplan-AP-Chemistry/David-Wilson/9781618652478?gclid=CJPZ-oTRpcACFSdp7AodaU0AoQ&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Why are you self-studying AP Chemistry?</p>

<p>What halcyon said. I would not recommend that at all.</p>

<p>Bad idea to self study chem especially with the revamped AP test</p>

<p>Self studying ap chemistry is a bad idea. You need a class</p>

<p>I wouldn’t self study. Why not take the class? </p>

<p>You won’t be able to do any lab work with self study</p>

<p>I’ve been in AP Chemistry for literally only two weeks, and I wouldn’t recommend self-studying it. I mean, I really love the class, but I can’t imagine taking it without peers and a teacher to help me.</p>

<p>The teacher at my school is really, really bad and would probably mess up my gpa. I need a chemistry credit so I have to self study for it.</p>

<p>@awakeningvenus @lovelyshores‌ @bopper‌ @Hawkace‌ @Ctesiphon‌ @PengsPhils‌ @halyconheather</p>

<p>

Such a bad plan. It is better to study alongside the class and ace the class. Colleges will not be impressed that you self studied AP Chem when your school offered it, especially if that is the explanation you will serve up.</p>

<p>you need a credit for high school, or for college? If for high school, colleges won’t consider self-studying it as part of your workload. If they require chemistry for admission, it won’t count, and it won’t give you any bonus points for learning it on your own.</p>