<p>I just purchased PR for the Calc AB&BC, and its pretty good. One thing I’ve noticed already is that the 1st problem set for derivatives included questions needing the chain rule before it was introduced in the book, which could confuse self-studiers. I do not know if there are other glaring typos… I hope not!</p>
<p>well im taking bio and world
bio: cliffs
world: barrons</p>
<p>for AP Chem should I use princeton preview or baron?</p>
<p>What is the best book for practice questions. A book with 10 tests or somehting would be ideal for me, I have all my notes and we have to outline when we read the textbook. I am looking at Ace your Midterms and Finals: US History, but its a college book, and I don’t know what book to buy for Biology. Something like cliffs which has only 2 tests is not good for me.</p>
<p>for AP Chemistry, use Princeton Review ONLY. It is a wonderful book. On top of the PR, make sure you take many practice FR and MC tests.</p>
<p>For US History, I have REA and Princeton Review (06-07). REA is known to be a great prep, but PR has practice q’s after each section. Which should I read if I only have time to read one?</p>
<p>Trust me from personal experience… Cliffs Biology is the ultimate book</p>
<p>got a 5</p>
<p>I bought Cliffs for bio but are the practice tests all you need to prepare? Or should I also buy PR for practice tests</p>
<p>cliffs is the definitely the best for bio - if you actually read it and use it haha. and if you can, ask your teacher for old ap exams. </p>
<p>for those who have already taken chem, what book has good practice tests to supplement pr’s review?</p>
<p>How do you gusy study Cliffs? Do you memorize everything?</p>
<p>…</p>
<p>Im kinda screwed…</p>
<p>I have to self study micro macro and psych and havent started yet. For econs i noticed people say princeton, so if i use that baby am i all good?</p>
<p>as for psych i peeked at the princeton, kaplan, rea, barrons and five steps to a five. It seems that five steps to a five covers practically everything that the rest tend to leave out here and there and works really well with our Benjamin textbook thats like 10 years old but supposedly one of the best. Like by reading 5 steps to a 5 im able to pull mostly B’s on the test only cuz the terms they use these days are a bit newer than the text’s. anybody else notice 5 steps to a five is kickass, or is it just me? I NNEEEEEEEEEDD a five on psych. HELPPP!!!</p>
<p>hi, i had just started self studying economics and psychology, exactly the same with you , and i used princeton’s for eco and barron’s for psychology, i think the barron’s is really good and probably would guarantee me a five, but the princetion’s economics seems not that authoritive, and the graphs are somewhat hard to memorize.
i think if you start now, you may have to work a little bit hard to get those things done, because there’s just about one month and a half left.</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.amazon.com/gp/richpub/listmania/fullview/R3MYLH5G8Y019O/002-0523367-3653626?_encoding=UTF8[/url]”>http://www.amazon.com/gp/richpub/listmania/fullview/R3MYLH5G8Y019O/002-0523367-3653626?_encoding=UTF8</a></p>
<p>Now that’s a nice link!</p>
<p>Any ideas for AP Languages? Barron’s?</p>
<p>so for calc BC- PR or Peterson’s?</p>
<p>So Cliff’s for Bio?</p>
<p>i would recommend cliff’s for bio… i didn’t learn **** in ap bio last year, but i still got a 5 probably because of this book and luck.
i read less than half the book, but what i from the topics i read in there that morning, it happened to be what was exactly in the ap free response questions (sheer luck), and so yes, it’s excellent preparation. isn’t overly detailed, but it is just right for what you need.</p>
<p>wat bout for CALC BC</p>
<p>and for ap statistics</p>