I hate to tell you this but the chances are stacked up against you. There is so much that goes into biology and into the processes that goes along with it that it would be impossible to cram it all into 4 nights. Biology is full of little details that are important to the overall process that can easily be missed if you don't look carefully enough.
2006-11-22 13:09:04
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answer #1
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answered by Old wise one 2
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I'm not gonna say you're set to get into cornell because each year it gets harder to get into college. I have a 4.7 and i didn't get into BC or Northeastern and I have a lot of activities too. Realize the people you are competing with are all doing lots of activities but the most important thing is sports not clubs. Schools know that clubs meet usually once a week for an hour and don't take much commitment compared to sports. Sports are everyday for usually 3 hours and sometimes weekends. Doing sports shows youre athletic, can work on a team, and can manage time. I would suggest doing sports all year round if you can, not just soccer. As for your classes, you should only be taking honors classes and above, regular classes are not even considered at Cornell even if you took them as an underclassmen. Don't overload on activities either, doing a few activities and a sport each semester shows you can commit, spreading yourself too thin makes you seem unrealistic. colleges don't like the girl who joined every club available and showed up to 3 meetings the whole year, they would rather see a girl who is physically active and gets into NHS and is in maybe 2 or 3 clubs tops and is an active member not just on the list of members. If those Bs were not in honors classes you need to work harder, it really is a lot harder to get into colleges now, more people are going and it isn't hard to get straight A's really push yourself, grades come first. Don't give up on math or science, colleges think girls doing well in these classes stand out doing well in english is no big deal because in most schools english is the easiest class (unless its AP). I can tell you that if you say you're gonna get a B you will but if you want the A it's not impossible.
2016-05-22 19:10:29
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I would get an SAT II study guide book. It should have a sample test and give you a brief outline of the things to know. In a big test like that there are certain areas they focus more so on (ex cell biology) so I would look at a book that is designed to prepare you for that test.
2006-11-22 12:17:01
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answer #3
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answered by starfire1020 2
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good luck. unless u study straight through, sleep less than 5 hours, eat little rations of food each day, and never leave your studies in those 4 days, maybe. even if u do that, u'll be 2 tired 2 do anything on the test unless u drink A LOT of caffeine
2006-11-22 10:36:39
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Wow, i tried cramming for the final exam in four nights and boy was i wrong in doing so... does that answer your question?
2006-11-22 12:14:23
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answer #5
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answered by Sasuke 2
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I cant stand biology!!! The only thing I like about it is genetics.
2006-11-22 10:31:38
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answer #6
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answered by K L 3
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Depends on your prior understanding of the material beforehand. If you knew it once, then it will come back easily enough. If you never knew it, dude you're screwed. Sorry.
2006-11-22 10:44:49
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answer #7
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answered by Niotulove 6
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For a review? If you have no choice; do what you have to do.
Preferable is to stretch it to whatever time you have available.
Good Luck!
;-)
2006-11-22 10:34:07
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answer #8
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answered by WikiJo 6
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yeah, sure nothing is impossible, only i hope you don't plan on sleeping for the next few days
2006-11-22 13:16:42
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Anything's possible!
2006-11-22 11:34:28
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answer #10
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answered by Moll 3
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