<p>Ok! my question is very huge this is like the ap question strategy for the year, apparently not many know it including me.</p>
<p>This is only for the multiple choice test, and i heard (it's true though not rumors) that (especially 100% used for physics B), people where able to answer the questions, by just again only, only looking at the answer choices. does anyone know this strategy, how is it used? Can anyone explain it, it would be more then a life savor!
Please if anyone knows it please post it, it could do a lot of good, somhow people knew how to answer questions by only, looking at the answer choices (that means forget about looking at the question), i heard this and confirmed by my teacher (that this student didnt do anything all year, [i believe he migh of even failed] not that im advising lazyness, on the contrary, don't), but he got a 4 and he used that strategy, so if anyone knows it please, please please post it. It could do a looooooot of good.
And done say it doesnt exist, i heard of this from about 5 sources (i'm however not 100% sure if this also worked for other ap tests, but for physics diffenitly did0 apparently some of them took a kaplan or any other test prep course.</p>
<p>Excuse all english errors i just have to find this strategy out!!! I am sure it would do a lot of people a loooooot of good!
OK that's all from me!</p>
<p>P.S this also doesnt mean not to study for the ap test because don't forget there are free response (open ended) questions!!</p>
<p>I don't think it's possible to answer the questions without at least glancing at the question. What a lot of students do is look for key words. Say you're writing a chemistry exam, and one of the multiple choice questions had the name 'Bohr' in it, you would naturally think that the question had something to do with the Bohr model of the atom. This doesn't always work, though. If the question was 'Which of the following is not part of the Bohr model of the atom', you would miss the entire point of the question if you didn't see the word 'Not'. </p>
<p>I just really don't think it's possible to answer a multiple choice question without looking at the question itself. The only possible way that could work is if you bought every single test prep book for that subuject, and memorized every single question. You would probably start to see a certain similarity. I doubt most people would want to, or have the resources to, do something like this.</p>
<p>If I'm wrong, please enlighten me, but I'm very sceptical...</p>
It doesn't exist
Only poorly written questions can be answered this way, and all the questions on an AP exam have been reviewed by 8 or 9 people, several of whom review questions for a living and have read all the books -- Kaplan, PR, 5 steps to a 5 -- so they are well-up on all the "tricks" that are supposed to work. Here is the only secret to getting a good score: Know the Stuff!!</p>
<p>Oh Oh I know! The biggest mcq strategy being used is the really complex technique whereby you buy an eraser and you label each side A,B,C,D, and E. Then whenever you bump into a difficult mcq question you just kinda toss the eraser into the air and bubble in the number that's face up. XD LOL.</p>