What on the AP Chem exam is not covered by Princeton Review??

<p>What on the AP Chem exam is not covered thoroughly or well by Princeton Review?</p>

<p>Also how accurate is PR for multiple choice? What about other books- 5 steps to a 5, Barron's, etc?</p>

<p>I have PR(my choice) and 5 steps(our teacher made us by it). I find PR to be wayyy better at teaching the lessons. Plus there are a ton of mistakes in 5 steps so don’t buy it.</p>

<p>But i’d also like to know if the PR MC is accurate of the real test.</p>

<p>i am also interested in this.</p>

<p>it seems accurate to me and I have taken many old AP chem exams.</p>

<p>Barron’s beats all for sure. Guaranteed 5 if you moderately comfortable everything in that book (minus the organic chapter entirely even).</p>

<p>i will have to borrow my teachers then.</p>

<p>What is the opinion of peterson’s or brown, lemay, burnsten?</p>

<p>what organic chem is on the ap test? and i’ve heard that barron’s has way more than what is actually on the test.</p>

<p>I am interested in this question too. I took a real CB practice AP Chem test but failed; it was before I had begun my serious AP Chem reviewing. Now I’m practicing in PR and doing better, but not sure if this is representative of the real difficulty of the test. I also have Barron’s, but I find PR to be more straightforward. Mom also bought me 5 steps, but I honestly haven’t even opened it.</p>

<p>^^There is basically no orgo on the test.</p>

<p>Barrons gives you way too much information.</p>

<p>very little if any orgo on the exam… I don’t think there was any last year</p>

<p>Is PR harder or easier than the real thing?</p>

<p>PR covers everything…just not in amazing depth. Go over the Zumdahl on parts you aren’t sure of (if you dont have that book use yours).</p>