<p>Since I take AP US History, AP Calculus and AP Chemistry, do I need to study for the SAT IIs in June? </p>
<p>Maybe for the Math I and II, but do I really need to since more material is covered on the AP than on the SAT II?</p>
<p>Since I take AP US History, AP Calculus and AP Chemistry, do I need to study for the SAT IIs in June? </p>
<p>Maybe for the Math I and II, but do I really need to since more material is covered on the AP than on the SAT II?</p>
<p>absolutely.</p>
<p>My girls did that…SAT IIs following AP. We did get study guides, but did not invest a lot of time in extra study- maybe an extra weekend. Used them mostly to know what exactly was covered on Math1 vs Math2 (D1 did Math1, D2 did math 2). They also took US History. Again used study guide to get feel for format/style of question. Both scored 760-780 on both. They also had 5s on APs so were well prepared.</p>
<p>So my answer is probably some, but not a lot unless you feel lost during AP exam.</p>
<p>AP Calculus is completely different from SAT Math I/II (since math subject tests only go up to pre-calc). In this case, it might be a good idea to review a bit for the math subject tests.</p>
<p>However, I guess for some subjects, AP preparation is sufficient. I scored 740 on Physics with only Physics C - Mechanics and hardly any other prep. Could’ve gotten 800 if I learned some more E/M but oh well.</p>
<p>No for US history. I only prepared for the AP test, took the subject test 3 weeks later and got an 800.</p>
<p>I personally didn’t prepare at all for math 2. The curve is extremely generous (800s start at like the 90th percentile) and if you’re doing well in calculus you’ll probably be fine. It couldn’t hurt to brush up on the geometry and trigonometry parts of precal</p>
<p>Yes. Either as a refresher for certain subjects like US history or for subjects like world history which are a lot different from the AP you need to study.</p>