Advanced/Honors/CP/Pre-AP

<p>Do colleges see all of these as the same?</p>

<p>All of my non-AP classes were labeled as CP, but my Algebra II was Pre-AP. Does it really matter? Will colleges be like "Y U NO TAKE ALL PRE-AP?!"</p>

<p>Well, at my school we have Regular and then Advanced/AP. For example, in freshmen year I was only given the choice of Regular and Advanced English. When AP is offer to upperclassmen, there will be no advanced (like junior year you pick between English 3 or AP English). </p>

<p>Why does your school have both Pre-AP and then CP? That’s weird IMAO. But as long it is outlined in your school’s profile (which is usually sent with a transcript), colleges will understand.</p>

<p>If CP is the lowest level class then
CP < Pre-AP/Honors/Advanced(same thing in most schools) < AP</p>

<p>Pre-AP just showed up my junior year, and by then I was in all AP classes (except for CP Chemistry (not Pre-AP)). CP is advanced; standard classes don’t have a suffix:&lt;/p>

<p>Like, for junior year English, you could take </p>

<p>English III
English III CP
or AP English III</p>

<p>Algebra II, on the other hand had:
Algebra II
Algebra II CP
and Pre-AP Algebra II.</p>

<p>Ahhh, Gotcha. I really don’t think colleges would even care then. And as I have already said, they could just easily look at your school profile and understand the differences in classes.</p>

<p>Are CP classes between regular and Pre-AP or are they better than Pre-AP?</p>

<p>What does CP even stand for?..college prep?</p>

<p>“CP is advanced; standard classes don’t have a suffix:”</p>

<p>I believe you mean prefix. </p>

<p>And at my school, CP is regular. </p>

<p>For me, it’s:</p>

<p>Basic < CP < Honors < AP</p>