<p>Hello there. I'm currently in my junior year at Montgomery High School. I'm planning on taking a 3rd SAT II in June. However, I was wondering which one to take (see title).</p>
<p>I already took Chem and Math II before and got an 800 on both. However, I'm not that great in US History or Bio (about the same in each).</p>
<p>I want to major in something sciency (maybe engineering), but my mom wants me to do business. Which one would be better in each case? Also, my mom says that colleges would rather prefer variety instead of 3 math/sciences, so what do you guys recommend I do?</p>
<p>First, look at which one you would like better.
Second, try to get practice tests for these two sections and see which one you do better on. If this is not possible, ignore this step.
Third, I would go for US History because it has a better curve(a.k.a. you can get more wrong and still score an 800).</p>
<p>Reference for Curves:
[SparkNotes:</a> SAT Subject Test: Biology: Scoring the SAT II Biology](<a href=“SparkNotes: Today's Most Popular Study Guides”>SparkNotes: Today's Most Popular Study Guides)</p>
<p>[SparkNotes:</a> SAT Subject Test: U.S. History: Scoring and the SAT II U.S. History](<a href=“SparkNotes: Today's Most Popular Study Guides”>SparkNotes: Today's Most Popular Study Guides)</p>
<p>I see that you’ve scored an 800 in Chem, and I want to ask you want prep books did you use and how did you prep? Also, did you take a class in Chemistry before the subject test? If so, was it regular/honors or AP/IB?</p>
<p>I think (don’t quite remember) I used either Barron’s or Princeton Review (I think it was PR). I went over the format for the T/F/CE, took one, went over whatever I got wrong, then took like 2 or 3 more. I took an AP course at my school and got a 5 on the exam. Personally, I thought the Chem SAT II was harder because of the time constraints and the harsher curve.</p>
<p>oh ok, thanks! I’m probably going to self study over the summer for Chem/physics/math 2 and then take them after i finish honors physics, honors chem, and honors pre-calc</p>