<p>Title says it all...</p>
<p>[AP</a> US History Resources | Course-Notes.Org - Outlines, Notes, Vocabulary, Essays, DBQs, Practice Quizzes and much more!](<a href=“http://www.course-notes.org/US_History]AP”>AP US History Notes, Outlines, DBQs and Essays | CourseNotes | CourseNotes)</p>
<p>Sorry to hijack this thread, but I was wondering . . . </p>
<p>Do many students use resources like these to prepare APUSH class outlines that are then graded?</p>
<p>Heres the hypothetical scenario: APUSH teacher includes textbook outlines to calculate the grades for his class. Students hand-copy their own versions of outlines posted online and submit these for their grades. Is this an ethics issue?</p>
<p>Let me add another detail. A student who does this gets 90s on most tests and quizzes, and has never used handwritten outlines to assist her in learning the material.</p>
<p>Im so naive about this stuff.</p>
<p>well im sure it has happened but i am self studying so i cant do that…hahahhahah</p>
<p>what ap class makes you do outlines? and of course it’s unethical, but since it’s a forum, there really isn’t any copyright issue, unless, of course, the person him/herself plagiarized and broke copyright law.</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.historyteacher.net/AHAP/Readings/THEGIANTAHAPREVIEW.doc[/url]”>www.historyteacher.net/AHAP/Readings/THEGIANTAHAPREVIEW.doc</a></p>
<p>Wow thanks Zens, that looks so thorough and detailed.
Just wondering, because I’m not going to have time to finish AMSCO for the later chapters (the more important ones, ~WWII to modern), but would reading these outlines suffice?</p>
<p>^ I was wondering that too since I don’t have time to read all of amsco by Thursday night… So ditto, is it possible to pass by just reading notes? (taking into consideration that I never read the textbook from chapter 24 on? lol)</p>
<p>[Welcome</a> to APNotes.net :: 100% notes, 0% crap](<a href=“http://www.apnotes.net/ap.html]Welcome”>The American Pageant AP US History Notes - 16th Edition:: APNotes.net)
What I used to study for tests all year rather than reading the chapters.</p>