<p>dylan- I actually think that is okay. I did roots and elaborated through root hairs and then stomata.</p>
<p>I’m not gonna lie, i thought the MC was extremely easy with a great influx of lab questions. Luckily my teacher was good at discussing lab questions and did alot of sessions explaining them to us. I predict that i got 90-95 out of the 100 Multiple choice correct, however on the FRQ i believed i got 60-80% of the possible points, the only thing that i found difficult was finding the last part of the last question and the last part of the 1st question. I’m not directly saying which ones however till 48 hours after the test.</p>
<p>I think i did well… lol i only didnt know 1 MC and but I didnt finish any free response. Do most people just do as many as they can completely or just rack up the easiest points? w/e def got a 5</p>
<p>Is it valid to cite the Casparian strip as a ‘structure’ that plays a part in the uptake of nutrients, seeing as how it forces all absorbed material to be ‘filtered’ through an endodermal cell since ones traveling through the apoplast cannot pass the Casparian strip?</p>
<p>Yes and then you could say how the plant selectively lets nutrients like K+ pass yet blocks Na+.</p>
<p>What about xylem and phloem? how do those fair in nutrient uptake?</p>
<p>Ah. I didn’t talk about K/Na but rather just the general filtration/selection that takes place. I hope that’s enough for credit.</p>
<p>i dont think that root hairs and then the mychorrizae would count as two different things, i think they were looking for root hairs system and then leaves, because they absorb CO2 and light to make sugar a nutrient</p>
<p>As for the test in general--APPass.com reports that a 75% on the MC and 5/10 on each FR is a 5 overall. I think I’m safe.</p>
<p>I got psi=-iCRT because of AP Chem.</p>
<p>Would chlloroplasts count lol for photosynthesis…gets glucose…hence nutrinet?</p>
<p>I did get i thanks to AP Chem… unfortunately I couldn’t remember what C was. (And after checking Wikipedia, I have no idea why they didn’t use M! M makes so much more sense than C…)</p>
<p>Oh man, that was awesome. I was stressing out last night because there were so many areas I didn’t know specifics in, and then none of those areas were on the test like at all. And the practice test I took last night gave me answers to several similar questions on the actual test. And the FRQs were on things I actually knew (except the last one, but at that point I was feeling a 5 so I DGAFed it and only answered the first part and 1/3 of the second part). And all the lab questions were “look at this graph and tell us what it means” instead of questions about specific procedures and whatnot.</p>
<p>Feeling good.</p>
<p>you werent supposed to get psi lol you had discuss like t temp c heat capacity etc</p>
<p>“Would chlloroplasts count lol for photosynthesis…gets glucose…hence nutrinet?”</p>
<p>Doubt it</p>
<p>I think the safest bet was stomata-co2, roots/root hairs-water</p>
<p>I didn’t have ANY time to answer the last equation…
for 4b all I put was like basic things and i think overall, i got like 2 points on that essay
For the other FRQs, i think I got like 9/10/8? so hopefully that evens out my fail of a 4th question lol</p>
<p>the MC was alright, too many lab related questions though -.- my teacher only had us do like 2 labs the whole year… I think that maybe I got like 65% - 90% of them right … lol that’s a huge range</p>
<p>But im really scared because like everyone was saying it was easy and there was no penalty for wrong answers, so the curve is going to be **** or just like nonexistant T.T</p>
<p><em>**praying for a 5</em>*</p>
<p>I thought the test was overall pretty easy. Expecting a 90+/100 on M/C, and a 32+ on FRQ. Then I went to take Physics C: Mech and got slaughtered.</p>
<p>same here lol. AP Bio was piece of cake. AP Physics C Mechanics was extremely challenging and brain power consuming.</p>
<p>It was easier than some of the old practice tests I took (well they were real tests released for purchase by collegeboard which my teacher allowed people to take).</p>
<p>Is carbon dioxide even considered a nutrient? At least in human nutrition, the six classes of nutrients are carbohydrates, fats (triglycerides), proteins, nucleic acids, vitamins, and minerals. The only category that comes close to describing carbon dioxide is minerals, but if i recall correctly, minerals only describe single elements and not compounds.</p>
<p>Also, would you guys say a nodule is a satisfactory response to the particular question which everyone else is discussing but I specifically have not mentioned? I was hesitant to put stomata, as some of you guys put, because of what I said above. Nodules, on the other hand, fixate N2 into nitrate, which is a form of nitrogen that the plant can use. Does that count?</p>