senior APs

<p>Are APs taken as seniors less important to colleges than others, because you can’t submit your scores or grades? Or will they count just the same as the others in terms of how rigorous your schedule is? I’m just starting junior year, but my planned senior schedule is the most impressive. </p>

<p>Is this reasonable, or am I putting too much in senior year vs. junior year?</p>

<p>Sophmore:
AP World
Junior
AP Calculus BC
AP Physics B
AP Language
AP US History
Senior:
AP Literature
AP *Economics
AP Biology
AP Physics C
AP European History
(maybe AP Government)</p>

<p>Senior schedule pales in comparison to sophomore/junior. That’s not to say it shouldn’t be rigorous, but it doesn’t need to be as rigorous as junior year.</p>

<p>You’ve kinda got it backwards.</p>

<p>I might be able to take AP Government Junior year. It looks like most colleges don’t really care about AP Physics B (in terms of credit for it), but I need to take that to do Physics C, don’t I?</p>

<p>^^It ultimately depends on your school’s policy for prerequisites; there is no official CB regulation which states that Phys. B must be taken prior to Phys. C. It would help to have at least rudimentary understanding of Calculus prior to taking C, though.</p>

<p>B and C share several physics concepts. B is physics in algebra while C is physics in calculus. B covers a slightly greater range of topics.</p>

<p>C is … better? I guess.</p>