<p>May is almost near. May 7 APUSH; May 10 Ap Bio; May 12 AP Lang. </p>
<p>3 Aps. Not much. Right now, it's just one hour a day of review (It's easier said than done). Well, I'm glad my teachers this year didn't procrastinate. When Spring Break hits, I'll add more hours.</p>
<p>I still need to finish economics before I start reviewing. Oh crap crap crap.</p>
<p>I’m under so much stress right now lol. If I don’t finish everything during spring break, I’m screwed. And the worst part is that I don’t have any motivation for studying. Oh well.</p>
<p>APUSH, AP English Language, AP European History, AP Statistics, AP Physics B, AP Calculus BC (too lazy to post the date)</p>
<p>Finish toward a specific chapter by the end of each week (Saturday). I hope to finish reading the textbooks by the two weeks before AP exams. Need the two weeks to read the study guides.</p>
<p>I am also taking Lang, Bio, and APUSH. Have not even started to review yet. Will probably do the prep books two weeks before the exams mainly because these subjects come easy for me. How do you study for AP Lang? We write essays in class, but I don’t think you can really study for an essay. Is it necessary for me to practice multiple choice in a prep book if my teacher already gives us tons of practice?</p>
<p>Depends on what score you plan to get on the AP English Lang. exam? If you aiming for a 5, 40+ (MC score after multiplying the raw score) and straight 8’s on essays to get that score.</p>
<p>I have 7 APs. I’ll read my prep books for all.</p>
<p>I’ll study like crazy for my two physics tests, the way I did for calc last year (got a 4) but I think it’s unreasonable for me to hope for anything more than a three. It’s very possible that I will fail both of them.</p>
<p>I’m going to call my sister and speak to her almost every night in French. Watch French movies with the subtitles on. Write more in French. Revise my old French essays and read through them to bring back the higher vocab.</p>
<p>Psych, I think I’ll be okay. I’ll just read the prep book, maybe my sister’s old notes (I’m not in the class, have no notes of my own).</p>
<p>My World History teacher has taught nothing. I’m going to make a little short cheat sheet for myself and study it like crazy. In case people here think that means I plan on cheating for the AP exam, by cheat sheet, I mean very short study sheet. </p>
<p>I have to get a 5 in Chem or my sister will never cease to make fun of me. I’m pretty beasting at the class, so I’ll just be sure to study hard. Do practice tests. Reread all of my notes, then reread all of my sister’s notes.</p>
<p>For English, I’ll go through all of the classics and other meaty books /works of literary merit I’ve read recently and get down some themes so that I’ll be able to not freak out on the essays. And then I’ll go over lit terms and poetry analysis with my prep book. Eng Lang abused me to damn me (Hamlet quote! Also, I mean I got a 4 and could have died from it). I’m not putting up with that from Lit.</p>
<p>I have eight AP tests and I haven’t even started studying for any of them (unless taking the class counts as studying). I haven’t even gotten any review books yet. Procrastination is my typical strategy for studying anything (it actually works for me most of the time, since studying the night before means that I’ll remember the stuff). For the social studies and English tests, I think I’ll do fine, but I need to seriously study for physics and chem.</p>
<p>I am and I don’t plan on studying this year. First, I’ve always tried to study from those review guides, but I always end up procrastinating and studying the night before. Second, there’s a very good chance I’m going to be a math major and the school I’ll attend probably will have a fair placement test for math courses. Third, if I’m not a math major, but some science major, I will need at least a semester long course to relearn most subjects (bio - some review, chem - a lot of review, physics - don’t really understand it, environmental - didn’t take it). Oh, and I’m just plain lazy.</p>
<p>Good luck to those of you who need the good scores.</p>
<p>Yes. People do make Ap review plans. And shut up, I know you have one too. (: It doesn’t have to be extensive; everyone has a different way of studying/reviewing, and others may not need much. But why have none? Even though the best AP review plan is to study throughout the year and excel high on every chapter, there’s nothing wrong with adding to that by reviewing everything in the one month before Ap week.</p>
<p>^I’m pretty much with you on the idea that the average AP student doesn’t need a review plan. But CCers seem to like studying.
I usually just study the night, maybe two nights before the AP. But this year I’m self studying two exams, so yeah, I do actually need to study for those. Two, I suck at, like, horribly. Like, fail every test in the class horribly. I’d rather not resign myself to failing. And one more, my teacher has literally never given us a lesson.
But the other one, whatever I say now, I know I won’t study.</p>
<p>I only have AP Biology and AP US Gov to worry about. Having said that, in AP US Gov, we covered absolutely NOTHING and in AP Bio, we are seriously behind, we only covered 22 chapters yeah…</p>