<p>concentric zone model: central business district surrounded by manufacturing, low class residential, middle class, and high class. based on idea that the farther away the land is from the central business district, the higher cost it is.
sector zone: can’t say that i memorized this one…but its a central business district with some sort of industrial column and an elite sector…with lower class and middle class filling in these areas…?
multiple nucleii: based off of the idea that the central business district is not necessarily the focal point of the city, each city is divided into several “nodes” that divide it into several different groups including the business district, high class, middle class, low class residential, industrial district…etc
there’s also latin city model…?
i read through barron’s once and skimmed through my school’s aphg textbook. skipping tomrrow because i have a major chem test i completely forgot about until 4pm today and my grade in that class can’t drop anymore than it already has…and because i want to read through these some more. any suggestions?</p>
<p>@joanybologna Just get the vocab down and read up on the Palestine Israel conflict. </p>
<p>Don’t forget to post a new question after you answer one!</p>
<p>Question: Put the parts of the language tree in order (Branch, family, etc.)</p>
<p>^Is that important? I’m not familiar with language stuff besides like the different families and groups and what pidgins and lingua frencas are.</p>
<p>^I doubt its importance. If you know Indo-European and know what isn’t Indo-European (eg: Basque) you will probs be fine for lang families. You don’t need to know the Finno-Ugric sub group or anything.</p>
<p>Oh, also, it’d be linguae francae. Incorrectly pluralized Latin annoys me to no end.</p>
<p>Lol, good because I don’t.</p>
<p>Alright so I’ll ask another question:
What is the difference between the modernist and postmodernist movements in city development?</p>
<p>Modernist: Industrialization
Postmodernist: Environmental concerns/sustainability</p>
<p>I thought modernist had concrete and glass buildings to signify scientific progress, whereas postmodernist had traditional architecture with details along with a lightheartedness (ie colors) to signify freedom. Postmodernist was a result of people’s tiredness surrounding modernism.</p>
<p>Hey guys, do you think if I skip school and study all day for this (haven’t started at all, self-study) I can get a 5?</p>
<p>OMG I am nervous. Gave Physics C M and bombed it. Self studied APES and found that it was a joke. Easy 5 or 4. </p>
<p>But APHuG…Huh??? I am taking a day off tmrw and gonna cram like the whole Barron book
@Mulberrypie: Well idk abt 5…but i am also like in a condition like u (Haven’t touched the book yet)</p>
<p>Haha, my parents won’t let me miss school tomorrow, but I’m cramming tonight and tomorrow night with Barron’s and PR. :P</p>
<p>Uggh…I need to review.</p>
<p>@mullberrypie - Yeah, it’s definitely possible, you just have to cram in a bunch of vocab. I’m also in the same predicament</p>
<p>has anyone here taken the previously released mc for ap human geo? because i did and it was SUPER easy. like idk half of what you all are talking about and missed 10…which is pretty good for that. anyway i don’t think the test is that difficult i really wouldn’t stress…but idk if its gotten more challenging since the last released mcs</p>
<p>pba2011- No I haven’t, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the actual multiple choice is much easier than any practice tests we’ve taken. That’s the way it was with APUSH and APES. The questions were very general and after scoring about 70% on practice tests I think I scored 80-85% on the real thing. </p>
<p>mulberrypie- I don’t know if it is very plausible though that you could earn a 5 though studying an entire course the day before. It’s may be possible though. Depends on how fast of a reader/learner you are.</p>
<p>Can I get a clarification?</p>
<p>Barrons says hierarchical diffusion is caused by high levels of interaction while Kaplan says it is caused by the social elite spreading ideas and patterns. Which one is correct? Kaplan’s definition makes more sense but Barrons is supposedly the best…</p>
<p>@skateme I got both books too. Kaplan sounds better to me.</p>
<p>PS anybody with barron there is a mistake in the beginning of the book that says you get 3/4 of a point off for not putting an answer when you really dont get any points off. I called them and they sent me a check for my money back.</p>
<p>im. freaking. out. definitely pulling an allnighter haha.</p>
<p>
Mine says 1/4 point.</p>
<p>@skateme: I think it’s both depending on the context. Take what I say with a grain of salt though.</p>
<p>I already got my coffee brewing in the background…it’s about to be a long night</p>
<p>I’m in the same boat fellas. Taking my final AP today :)</p>
<p><a href=“http://playroom.crescentschool.org/geography/Human/WorldGeographyIndex.htm[/url]”>http://playroom.crescentschool.org/geography/Human/WorldGeographyIndex.htm</a></p>
<p>^ Great powerpoints for review here.</p>
<p><a href=“http://playroom.crescentschool.org/geography/Human/Review/reviewindex.htm[/url]”>http://playroom.crescentschool.org/geography/Human/Review/reviewindex.htm</a></p>
<p>Awesome review too.</p>