Accepted Students: What's the highest level of math you took in HS?

<p>h. math</p>

<p>What Anhydrosis says is true for my high school, too. Maybe half the kids going to Michigan next year took Calc [BC], around a quarter of them took precalc, and a few of them right before precalc.</p>

<p>If you took a non-AP Calc class (like Honors Calculus) in high school, is it basically a guarantee that you'll take Calc 115? Is there anything the online test could do to get you into 116?</p>

<p>Nobody took AP Statistics? Do your schools not offer that class after BC?</p>

<p>I took ap stat my senior year and calc bc my senior year. I listed ap stat as my highest math cuz I consider it to be.</p>

<p>I understand the Math Dept has a separate placement test to allow you to get into a higher math course without AP. I am in a similar boat. My high school offers "dual credit" courses, where you take college classes at your high school and receive college credit from universities in my region of the country. However, Michigan will not accept my Calc I and Calc II classes because I was competing against high school students. So, I have to take Math 115 unless I pursue the separate placement exam and I'm not sure when it's offered. You might want to call or email the Michigan Math Dept.</p>

<p>Thank you. That's actually very helpful advice.</p>

<p>Diezel, no sweat, dude.</p>

<p>Do you think the likelyhood of acceptance into LSA is significantly higher for students that take some type of calculus class in HS as opposed to those students that have only taken up to Pre-Calc?</p>

<p>I don't know about SIGNIFICANTLY higher, but higher... if it's offered at your high school, and especially if you're out-of-state. It the whole "rigorous course load" thing.</p>

<p>For the sake of demonstrating how the people here aren't normal... {AP stats, AP calc BC @ high school}, {Intro to Advanced Mathematical Thinking, Intro to Linear Programming, Geometric Structures, Combinatorics: Enumeration @ Oakland University}, {Honors Math I, Honors Math II, Problem Solving Seminar @ U of M}</p>

<p>Haha, OUSMI? That's not fair.</p>

<p>I totally bombed the test. I got 28/45 and I had a calc class.</p>

<p>OUSMI is totally fair. Free tuition, free food, free books, a bunch of my friends from math stuff. Only thing that would make it better is if it somehow wasn't a commuter camp so it could draw in smarter people from a wider area.</p>

<p>The most I took in highschool was Algebra 2... lol guess I don't fit within the CC people...</p>

<p>Anpeju, you are probably only one of the few who are willing to "admit" such things. It seems that some CC people stay quiet when they feel they are below the CC average. (I sometimes do.) However, CC does seem to attract a large portion of very high achievers.</p>

<p>I'm below avg 2 haha...cmon who on here got an SAT score of an 1180 and yes like outofstateorbust I bombed that math placement test 2...YEAH!!!!! hahaha...</p>

<p>lol it's good to know there are some people on here like me. umardarr, my sat was about as low as yours, on the other hand, i'm an urm which helped me get in i suppose. and anhydrosis2000, i don't think anyone here should be ashamed to say the truth even if they were below the average CC member. i'd say that only shows the school is not as inaccesible as many people make it seem and that it has all kinds of people.</p>

<p>anpeju, I agree. However, not everyone is as bold as you and can be intimidated at times. I try not to be, but it is a rather auspicious group on the whole.</p>

<p>Keep setting an example for the rest of us! We will all get better information upon which to make our decisions and learn from this website.</p>

<p>Go dumb people!Woop. I'm totally going to be squished by everyone's brilliance when I go to umich. But sad to say, I scored higher than you guys in the sat.</p>

<p>(if I get in)</p>

<p>College Applied Calculus 3 for Science & Engineering w/ a concurrent enrollment in HS Multivarious Calculus (post-AP)</p>