<p>Umm… I was about to flame you, but went back and read that first line again and controlled myself :]</p>
<p>But do you really want to do this because you feel they’re things that “every human being should know about” and are “so amazing”?? I know that sounds good, but it might not be completely true. If you’re only planning on “[seeing] the material at a glance,” why even bother? You’ll learn it in college anyway if you don’t use the credit. I’d say to self-study the ones you’re not AS interested in [like 6 of them maybe, depending on how high that number is over 10, lol], and possibly go ahead and take the other courses at a community college over the summer? or even at a reg. college? Then you’d have the credit early and get the college learning experience as well. That way, you could devote more time to the classes that you self-study and if you pull off 5s on all of those, maybe you’d WANT to use the credit.</p>
<p>It’s not worth 800+ dollars IMO, especially if you’re not getting the credit. If you’re really set on studying all of these courses, why not just study them and not take the exams for some of them? I don’t know, I just can’t imagine personally self studying over 10 exams, paying almost a thousand dollars to take exams, and not even using the credit…</p>
<p>And yeah, colleges would notice if you have 10 extra exam scores to submit, especially if they’re really good. But they might wonder whyyy? you’re taking them. I guess if you still have a life outside of all that and you explain your passion for learning this stuff, it’d be fine.</p>
<p>Just personally, I wouldn’t do it.</p>