<p>right now im in ap calc ab in school (because they don't offer bc, not enough people signed up :( ) so how do I start studying for it? We are just finishing up limits and continuity, and are going to start the derviative chapter next. hella slow</p>
<p><a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/ap-tests-preparation/927984-guide-self-studying-calculus-bc-while-taking-ab.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/ap-tests-preparation/927984-guide-self-studying-calculus-bc-while-taking-ab.html</a> </p>
<p>I think this is a great guide.</p>
<p>did you ever do it?</p>
<p>No, I’m doing it right now like you are. But some people in that thread have.</p>
<p>Has anyone ever self-studied Calc BC without taking AB?</p>
<p>i did it last year as a freshman when i was in precalc.</p>
<p>Was it hard?</p>
<p>it was a joke. All i used was a Textbook (Larson. i didnt like stewart), but you really only need a solid prepbook. I highly recommend barrons or petersons.</p>
<p>just do
limits/continutity in 1.5 weeks
Derivatives in 1 month
Applications in 1 month
Integration in 1 month
Applications of Integration in 1 month
Linear DifEqs in 2 weeks
Series and Sequence (These suck) in 2.5 weeks.</p>
<p>thats all to it really. just do lots of problems. If u want a 5 on the AP, go with a prepbook. if u wanna go beyond the AP curriculum, and become solid in calculus, take a textbook. i highly recommend u also study trig integration, and basic MVcalculus, such as curls, divergence, line integrals, gradient, laplaces, partial derivatives, etc.</p>
<p>OK. Thanks a lot. I was wondering if I should do it, but since I don’t like Math that much, I thought it’d be too much.</p>