@CavsFan2003 don’t sweat it. What you are seeing is the disparity in the quality of education and approach to learning that exists in our country. The school wants you in the right class. Clearly your current school is not giving you the best that is available.
As an aside, my eight grader’s Spanish classes have been taught almost entirely in Spanish for years. The foreign language teachers have to grade some students new to the district on a different scale because they walk into a middle school classroom with little to no English being spoken and they don’t have the knowledge to keep up.
With you already being in high school and in a Spanish class being taught with a significant English component, life might be quite missable in a higher level Spanish class at BS or even at very good public schools. Your BS wants you to thrive, they are placing you in a good spot.
I went to revisit a day school and they put us in a “mock” freshman Spanish class…yikes. Most of the admitted students could handle the teacher speaking entirely in Spanish but I was thinking that “most” students are not in immersion programs so how could they deal. The teacher was asking questions and even looking to parents to answer at times. I was stressed and wishing I paid more attention in Spanish I and II in high school.