<p>i find chem very boring and will have about an 89 average overall in that class. Should I take AP Physics B since I am taking AP Calc AB?</p>
<p>do you mean take the AP exam like this year? That is crazy. Also physics and chem in the AP level have really no relationship. In addition do you take AP chem?</p>
<p>Chem and physics are really not related enough to take the AP exam this year. Even AP chem is not related enough to take the AP physics B this year. Your calc may be enough, but you don't seem to have any PHYSICS knowledge.</p>
<p>no i mean should I take the class next year. Not the exam this year. Thats crazy talk lol</p>
<p>I was like what are they talking about lol :p</p>
<p>Yes, Chem and physics are very different, if you like the math part of chem then you'll probably find physics more agreeable</p>
<p>u mean like stoichometry and stuf?f?</p>
<p>do you like the science part of chem better? Or having to do mathematical equations (such as stoichiometry)</p>
<p>i like stoichiometry more as there is no way I can get the wrong answer. Should I still take ap phys?></p>
<p>sorry I'm not being really specific (we only have physics C here, which is calc-based). I'd rather have someone with physics B experience help you out</p>
<p>I haven't taken physics B. But I take AP chem, and am going to take C next year.<br>
[quote]
if you like the math part of chem then you'll probably find physics more agreeable
[/quote]
I really don't think there is much math in AP chem. It's more concept-oriented. I know that while in C you prove your equations in B you memorize them. You don't need calc. I think you can do fine, not based on your chem score(obviously no correlation there) but because it's algebra-oriented and is easier than C.</p>
<p>It's not direct math, but you have to know some logs, some math concepts to be successful, at least at my school</p>