<p>^lol… don’t kid a kidder.</p>
<p>So, I’ll put my opinions on here</p>
<p>Easy: World History, Psychology, English Language, Spanish Language (native speaker edition),
Easy/Medium: Calculus BC, US Gov’t
Medium: Physics B, Chemistry, CoPo, English Lit,
Hard: US History</p>
<p>Also, there is little value to sending in scores before your senior year. Colleges do not use AP scores for admissions, and you can self-report them on apps. I am only sending them in now, and I was admitted to some very selective schools.</p>
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<p>Not really. The multiple choice, more so for US History than World (I can’t speak for Euro not having taken it), asks pretty specific questions. For example, they might ask you who Ida Tarbell was, or ask the government’s policy towards native Americans in the late 1880s was all of the following EXCEPT, or ask you which of the following is the difference between the Chesapeake bay and New England colonies and have five equally likely answers that are impossible to distinguish which one is correct unless you guess or happen to have learned that particular fact. World is more “trend-y” and trends will get you far but the US History exam is much more specific and if you do not remember specific facts you will not get a 5.</p>
<p>I actually think that the essays require less MEMORIZATION but more ANALYSIS, because if you do not remember a particular fact, you can use another one that also supports your point. If a multiple choice question asks you something, though, you can’t really dodge that fact; if you don’t know it, then you don’t know it. I do think the Multiple Choice is easier but not for that reason.</p>
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<p>Which schools?</p>
<p>Grats on being a failure. What’s your starcraft name and code? Or are you a random that plays campaign?</p>
<p>Add me: Progamermatt character code = 402</p>