<p>I'm taking APUSH, AP Lang, AP Envi. Science, possible Compt Gov and Macro.</p>
<p>This year I got a 3 on WH, but I'm fine with that because we only had a semester for that and we had to rush through the material and no one in this AP got a 5 in my school.
5's on Psych and Human Geo though so happy about that.</p>
<p>What books do i need, when to start studying, level of difficulty etc</p>
<p>THANKS! :D</p>
<p>Well a lot depends on the person. Also, are you taking classes for those subjects or just taking the tests?</p>
<p>Im taking the class for the first 3.</p>
<p>Paying attention and taking notes in class is probably the #1 thing you can do. TBH - Reading whatever textbook you’re given may or may not be a very efficient use of your time aside form doing whatever busywork might be assigned from it. For AP Lang there’s not really much prep for it IMO…either you’re good or your not at writing essays.</p>
<p>If you have a good teacher, you need to do very little studying to get a 5 on APUSH. Just make sure to keep up with notes and actually read the textbook chapters. Once there’s about 2 weeks left before the exam, buy the crash course book and go through it a few times. I’m not a good history student by any means and that got me a 5.</p>
<p>bump…//////////////</p>
<p>For APUSH, lots of practice writing essays, and get a box of barron’s flashcards to study. Besides that, just pay attention to what your teacher says in class and you should be fine.</p>
<p>For APUSH and Environmental Science, the class alone and a half a day to 3 days cram before the test should get you at least a 4–that’s if you did your homework or recommended studying for the class.</p>
<p>If you want a better guarantee for 5s for any of your classes, I’d recommend practicing the free response (especially for Enviro) and studying the topics that you don’t know so well. But if you’re confident you’re going to get a 5, put your effort into other things of course.</p>
<p>With class courses shouldn’t be too much of a worry–except English Language because it’s mostly practice and lots of experience that’ll get you the high score instead of the class.</p>