<p>Hello everyone! Do you know anything about the French Theater Workshop at Princeton? The course is part of a program called L’Avant-Sc</p>
<p>If you matriculate to Princeton I’m sure you’ll be able to take this course. However, I am skeptical as to whether you would be permitted to take a course at Princeton as a non-enrolled high school senior.</p>
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<p>As a current senior who was in your position last year, I can help you out. First, I exhausted my Spanish curriculum, not French, but I’m pretty sure most foreign language departments are conducted in a similar manner for high school students who want to enroll in Princeton classes. Two things. One, you will not be able to take anything higher than a low 200 level French class that focuses mostly on intermediate/advanced language and style. Two, you will need to be a student in a local high school that is partners with the Princeton University Preparatory Program that trains undergrads interested in education to work with local high school teachers. It’s basically like a partnership that allows Princeton students to learn from local teachers and those teachers’ students to learn from Princeton professors (you don’t receive college credit, and all grades are factored into your high school GPA). You will also need to earn a 5 on the AP exam.</p>
<p>As far as registration and available spots, you get to register after Princeton students have finished. Whatever is left is what you get.</p>
<p>If you have any other questions, let me know. Also, I anticipate that you will need theatre experience or knowledge to take the class you mentioned.</p>
<p>no audit DOES NOT mean no audition. Auditing a class means taking it not for credit - for princeton students, auditing a class means that it doesn’t count towards any requirements (even the number of classes needed to graduate), and requires doing a lot less work (for example, maybe you don’t have to do problem sets or papers and just have to pass the final exam).</p>