SAT II Chem OR Physics..

<p>From an Indian curricula viewpoint, which, between SAT II Physics and SAT II Chem is easier?
PS :I’m an 11th grade student in the ICSE …</p>

<p>Physics is pretty simple, dunno anything about chem</p>

<p>Hey Karan, I gave the Physics sample questions on CollegeBoard’s site but they seem way too easy. Is that really the level of questions asked on SAT? I have tried practice papers from various books and each has a different idea of what kind of questions appear on SAT. If you have given it before can you point out any which closely resembles what I will be asked on an actual SAT Physics exam?</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>@Rohit : The physics questions on the collegeboard website are indeed easier than the actual test. I haven’t tried any practice books but sparknotes is a good index. They are pretty close to the actual one, but not exactly. Still the numericals are quite easy. You’ll need to brush up your theoretical concepts though. If you have studied 11th and 12th class physics well, you are sitting pretty. Another important thing is the need to pace yourself, since the test has 75 questions and the time is 60 minutes, you’ll get an average time of less than a minute per question. Solve accordingly. And good luck practicing.</p>

<p>I did all 4 practice tests of Thomson Peterson’s SAT II Success Physics in under 50 minutes (75 questions) but got about 5 wrong and 5 unanswered on average.</p>

<p>I will check out sparknotes. Thanks. Is it close to what Math Level I would ask me too?</p>

<p>adi295 physics definitely more easier</p>

<p>The syllabus of physics might be easier than the chemistry test but it is easier to score in Chem.
I know tons of people(including me) who got an 800 in chem but go stuck with 750-780 in physics</p>

<p>Physics has a much better curve to get to 800. You can get more questions wrong and still get there if you know your stuff.</p>

<p>There is nothing stopping you from taking both if you are preparing for JEE.</p>