<p>At your school, that is.</p>
<p>Ap gov or ap Lang because those are the only 2 APs</p>
<p>None, really. But if we’re talking about 90% A’s, then definitely AP Calc BC. The curve is so steep because our teacher makes his tests ridiculous. A 75% is an A, 65% a B, etc.
All students get 4s or 5s on the AP, though.</p>
<p>AP Physics and AP Gov.</p>
<p>At my school its AP Calc AB. Like you said, a high grade is expected on the AP exam.</p>
<p>Standard rule: If you pass the class, you get a 5.</p>
<p>AP English Lang - even the strongest of English students struggle to maintain low A’s, while other students who don’t have a particular affinity for writing tend to sink with C’s and D’s.</p>
<p>AP world. The teacher plans it that way and tells all of his classes the first day that you’ll get the worst grade you’ll ever get in high school in his class. And he doesn’t even help you with the AP exam.</p>
<p>In my school, AP Physics B and AP US History I both only have 4-5 A’s per year. It takes a certain mind and drive to receive an A in those courses (both which have hefty curves on tests). Algebra II Honors, which is typically a freshman course, also seems to have a very low amount of A’s.</p>
<p>Honors physics.
I’m taking it next year and all I’ve heard are horror stories.</p>
<p>English at my school:
B = do your work. Could be **** and complete BS and improperly cited junk
A = Teacher likes you, everything is perfect, revisions to an intentionally bad rough draft</p>
<p>Oh wait, how could I forget about APUSH? Definitely major grade deflation there lol. It sucks because one APUSH teacher teaches most of the classes and gives mostly As, but I happened to get the teacher who only teaches one APUSH class and gives out ~3 As. Sometimes she has to curve the percentage to an 87%, lol.</p>
<p>Anything math for me. Literally, the highest I’ve ever gotten was a B or B+ even when I had really easy and great teachers.</p>
<p>Also at my school, AP Bio. Our teacher didn’t do a good job of teaching it and most of us failed except for a couple of kids who really really enjoyed the subject and could learn a lot of stuff on their own.</p>
<p>AP US and AP Bio, which happen to be the two worst classes in history(no pun intended)…no question LOL</p>
<p>all lit and lang (honors/ap) and AP World</p>
<p>Overall, AP Calculus at the BC level. That is a course many highly selective college will give a kid a pass for a B or even a C with an otherwise great transcript.</p>
<p>For us probably any of the IB HL courses, especially math and physics.</p>
<p>Last year it was AP World, my teacher was just plain sadistic. I have so many friends who;d have straight A’s and then a C in his class because of the test grades, and thats after he curved it! I know these kids weren’t dumb or mediocre he was just a horrible teacher.</p>
<p>@clairee, True that! Definitely IB HL Math at my school. Worked mah bum off for an A- last year.</p>
<p>AP sciences are the hardest classes (i mean they take 2 periods a day to complete) but they have a 20% curve on exams making them possible for students to not flunk out and even get an A. However to answer the question, it is probably Calc AB if taken junior year. This is because the Calc teacher doesnt weight grades and the fact that our school has huge inflation on seniors grades as teachers try to avoid making finals by giving them As second semester. For myself feel that AP English was the hardest but then again im dyslexic.</p>
<p>Edit: By AP sciences i meant Bio, Chem, and Physics. APES is probaly the easiest AP class along with Psych.</p>
<p>APUSH and AP Biology are probably the hardest classes to get A’s in at my school, according to those who’ve taken them.</p>