Is this even possible?

<p>Do you think I can self study AP Human Geography, AP Psychology, and AP Environmental Science in the next ~70 days before ap testing?</p>

<p>I’m doing it in a last ditch effort to claim as much credit as i can at Texas A&M University. All I need are straight 3’s. </p>

<p>Is it feasible? and if so, how should I go about doing it?</p>

<p>Thanks in advance.</p>

<p>The better question is if those ap credits actually get college credit you need. Obviously, there’s no point in having a credit in something your major doesn’t require.</p>

<p>well this is a link to my degree plan <a href=“http://www.bio.tamu.edu/UGRADINF/2011Degrees/BS%20BIOL%202011-2012.pdf[/url]”>http://www.bio.tamu.edu/UGRADINF/2011Degrees/BS%20BIOL%202011-2012.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>it says i need 3 hours of a social science, 3 hours of a humanity, and then a bunch of hours of free electives.</p>

<p>i’m sure i will end up needing the credit that i’ll get for those tests for something.</p>

<p>Considering those are probably the easiest AP’s to self study, you should probably be fine if u have the time and learn quickly. Also for Ap physc I’d get barrons and the barrons flash cards</p>

<p>thanks guys. any more opinions?</p>

<p><a href=“http://mars.tamu.edu/testingsite/HTMLfiles/highschool.htm[/url]”>http://mars.tamu.edu/testingsite/HTMLfiles/highschool.htm&lt;/a&gt; has a link to a document specifying what AP scores count for what courses. Check whether the AP tests you are considering can give credit for courses that you can apply to your major or breadth requirements.</p>

<p>Of those three, I only self-studied for AP Human Geography, and it’s definitely feasible. I found the Barron’s guide to be particularly helpful. Just make sure you know the vocabulary well and you should be fine. A lot of the questions are just common sense.</p>

<p>bump10char</p>

<p>bump10char</p>