<p>AP Chem
AP English Lit
AP Music Theory
AP Latin Vergil/Latin 4 H (it basically is this course; we read all the course stuff but we are not allowed to take the test; I am trying to argue for us to be able to take it!)
Govt and Economics H
Precalc H
Theology H</p>
<p>AP Psych (self study)
AP Micro/Macro (self study)</p>
<p>i don’t think a lot of the people on this site realize how tough their schedules are. they’ve become so accustomed to the toughest courses that they don’t realize how easy the general courses. I know i did. I had all honors/AP classes and a general elective class… economics. I couldn’t believe how dumb some of the kids were. I did almost nothing in the class and received an A in the class whereas I worked so hard in AP/Honors classes just for B+s and A-s. </p>
<p>Difficulty of schedule also depends on the school and teachers. Personally at my school, 3 AP classes is considered suicide. An honors class is considered much more difficult than a regular course and AP courses are reserved only for top students. </p>
Well I was reborn… in a religious sense… which is obviously what you’re talking about or you are baiting a discussion about moderator action… which is not allowed.</p>
<p>While we’re listing self-studies… which aren’t technically a “course”:</p>
<p>Self study:
AP English language or lit
AP Computer Science AB (If I’m disciplined enough)
AP Physics C Electricity and magnetism
AP Physics C mechanics
AP Psychology
AP Statistics
AP Spanish Language (Well… not technically a self-study)</p>
<p>yeah for Sophomores taking Calc BC!
Except at my school its pretty common unlike in yours. Our rare case is Multivariable Calculus in Freshman year. he’s really good…</p>
<p>Smells like someone needs to find a hobby. It’s funny how kids are taking 80 A.P. classes. I think you should take courses that not only look good on your transcript but courses you are going to enjoy as well. Admission people will see straight past that “super kid” **** and deny your ass in a heart beat. Relax and live a little.</p>
LOL I can assure you, that in the entire history of my county… there has never been ANYONE to EVER take Multivariable calculus in ANY grade lower than as a community college Sophomore. Which is terrible! I’ll actually be the first person to take multivariable calculus!</p>
<p>Smells like someone needs to find a hobby. It’s funny how kids are taking 80 A.P. classes. I think you should take courses that not only look good on your transcript but courses you are going to enjoy as well. Admission people will see straight past that “super kid” **** and deny your ass in a heart beat. Relax and live a little.</p>
<p>I think this is an over-generalization. Some kids are taking a lot of AP classes to “look good,” but some kids truly want to learn. I may not be thoroughly interested in every AP class I’m taking next year, but I’m taking them because frankly, I’d really like a challenge at school and I’d like to really learn a lot next year. I’m taking them to learn, not to look good on my transcript. </p>
<p>And by the way, one of my friends took 7 AP classes last year (6 5’s, 1 4) and still had an extremely active social life. Just because you’re busty with school doesn’t mean you can’t have an enriching social life.</p>
<p>Although your point is mostly true, don’t overgeneralize.</p>
<p>I think that you are over-generalized. The majority of kids take A.P. classses to look good and/or be in classes with their friends. A.P. classes have lost their meaning, they are just a number in the world of admission. Who in the hell would willing subject themselves to 7 hours of HW a night and zero hours of sleep if they knew they weren’t getting anything out of it. No one. So let’s not fool ourselves here. The bottomline is that kids are becoming more like robots and super-teens than actual teenagers. You know what? I am guilty of it, everyone is. Mitigate this notion of perfection and just be!</p>