<p>1.AP
2.Honors
3.Advanced
4. Dual-enrollment
5. Regular
6. Core</p>
<ol>
<li>AP or college class (we have Multivariable Calculus, which isn’t an AP but is a college class and is weighted as AP)</li>
<li>Honors</li>
<li>College Prep</li>
<li>Doesn’t have a name because the kids are mixed into CP classes, but “extra help” type class</li>
</ol>
<p>AP
Honors/PreAP (only in 9th grade history, 9th/10th grade English)
General/College Prep
Remedial (alternatives for kids who don’t pass state testing)</p>
<p>AP/Dual Enroll (both have same weight)
Honors
Regular</p>
<p>Then we have Career Tech Academies in Engineering (I’m currently in this one), Biomedical, EMT, and Health I believe. They all provide internships/co-ops if you reach the highest tier in the academy (some are 3-tiers, others are 4)</p>
<ol>
<li>AP</li>
<li>Dual Enrollment, which is like AP but is typically a little easier at my school</li>
<li>Honors, for underclassmen and pre-reqs for AP classes</li>
<li>General</li>
</ol>
<p>At my old school, however, there was only general-level classes. If you were advanced, you were simply placed into next year’s course and took the class with older students.</p>
<ol>
<li>AP</li>
<li>Honors (not very many, only in subjects such as Precalculus that do not have AP options)</li>
<li>Regular</li>
<li>Sheltered (for kids who learned English as a second language; available in all core subjects)</li>
</ol>
<ol>
<li>AP/Honors…if there is an AP test then it is offered as an AP class, if not it is honors </li>
<li>Regular</li>
<li>Individualized (special ed, college prep, same books/tests as #2, smaller class size)</li>
<li>Practical (special ed, not college prep, usually below 8th grade level academics)</li>
<li>Functional (classes for mentally impaired students)</li>
</ol>
<p>Students aren’t tracked. Someone with a language disorder but gifted in math could be in individualized English, AP Calc, and regular Biology 2.</p>
<ol>
<li>AP (weighted)</li>
<li>accelerated (English 1 and 2),(not weighted, just more advanced)</li>
<li>then the core classes, trade classes, electives, and PE</li>
<li>special ed</li>
</ol>
<p>we have the typical APs, missing a couple. no honors at all the last one was cut out last year and they added more APs… :(</p>
<p>1) FCAT prep classes (for people who failed it)
2) College Readiness. This is mainly just for math classes. It’s for people who didn’t do so well in Algebra 2 or Geometry.
3) Regular
4) Honors
5) Pre-IB/Pre-AP Both are weighted as honors but harder and geared towards AP/IB.
6) AP/IB/Dual Enrollment</p>
<p>We don’t have levels in the UK.
The only thing similar is opting to take a standard level rather than higher level exam, which only allows you to get a C or below.</p>
<p>1.) College prep- This included honors and classes like Physic/ Algrebra, English, Pre-cal
2.) General- is the same excat no honors but classes like Pysical Sciene and life science. This is what most people does. Some exception are Chem. and Algrebra because they are "Required.
3.) Remedial Freshman only. Unless you taking Pre-Algrebra in 9th/10th grade.</p>
<p>We don’t really have levels- it’s more like you pick which classes you want to take: if you want to take advanced Bio, the live with the fact that it’s AP, and if you want to take physics, then live with the fact that it’s not. The school relies on the fact that the averge kid is either smart enough to pass the class she picks or smart enough not to pick a class she can’t pass.
The only classes with levels are math (where depending on whether you were able to take accelerated math in junior high you can take accelerated math evey year- yippee, my junior high didn’t offer accelerated math so I’m stuck in AlgII), 12th grade English (AP Lit or non-AP), 10th and 11th grade history (AP Euro and APUSH or Global II and non-AP USH), 12th grade US Gov (AP or non-AP) and 10th grade Hebrew Language (Honors or Regular- as long as your frosh average was above a 75 you’re in honors).</p>
<ol>
<li>IB</li>
<li>AP</li>
<li>Honors</li>
<li>Regular</li>
<li>I have heard of some kids taking middle school classes in high school here so I guess that’s basically as low as you can go… xD</li>
</ol>
<ol>
<li>AP (Biology, Chemistry, English Lit, U.S. Government) </li>
<li>Honors (math, science, English)</li>
<li>College Prep</li>
</ol>
<p>“Is general supposed to be for the ‘dumb kids’?”</p>
<p>Not at my school, usually because there’s no honors alternative. We don’t have honors foreign languages or honors social studies.
When there’s an honors alternative, the lazy/annoying/disruptive kids choose to be in the regular class and the decent/hardworking kids choose to be in the honors class. There aren’t many truly smart people at my school (at least, there aren’t a lot of people who openly show high intelligence). It’s a regular public school in the middle of nowhere and most of us are of average or slightly below average intelligence.</p>
<ol>
<li>AP</li>
<li>High Honors (weighted same as AP but normally isn’t equivalent)</li>
<li>Honors</li>
<li>College Prep</li>
<li>Remedial classes</li>
</ol>
<p>They’re actually changing it next year, interestingly enough. But for this year, it’s:
Honors/AP: Level 1
College Prep: Level 2
“Medium” (I guess): Level 3
Remedial: Level 4</p>
<p>Next year, however:
Level 1-> Honors/AP
Level 2-> Accelerated
Level 3-> College Prep
Level 4-> Moderate
Level 5-> Remedial</p>
<p>The supposed reason for the change is so the athletes who only take level 3s have a better shot at getting into colleges, since level 3 is now “college prep.” Also, level 2 is by no means “accelerated”… at all.</p>
<p>1) AP
2) Honors
3) Merit</p>
<ol>
<li>AP</li>
<li>Extended (only available for Grade 11 Math)</li>
<li>Enriched</li>
</ol>
<p>Aaaand that’s it. Well except for gym which is “Open”. But this is in Canada, so the system’s quite different (AP is the same, enriched is basically honours, academic would be university prep, applied would be college prep, and local would be for people not planning on pursuing any post-secondary education)</p>
<ol>
<li>AP</li>
<li>Gifted</li>
<li>Honors</li>
</ol>
<p>1) AP
2) Honors/Gifted (usually just English, social studies, and lower-level math)
3) College Prep (same as above)</p>
<p>Our school doesn’t label non-AP calculus or statistics even though they’re weighted like honors courses because we only need up to Algebra 2 to graduate.</p>