<p>Hey guys, if you don't know me by my annoying posts everyday by now I'm a freshman who doesn't know what real stress is.</p>
<p>Math is my strong subject. My only strong subject. I'm in Pre-Calc H this year, which here isn't really much of an achievement apparently, but at my school there are no other freshman that have ever been in that class.</p>
<p>Seeing that I'm going to finish AP Calc BC at the end of junior year I want to take a more advanced math in senior year. I've vaguely heard about Multivariable Calculus which is taken at a community college.</p>
<p>Thing is, since I'm the only person in my school finishing BC before senior year, there are no faculty members that will grasp the concept of me taking Multivariable Calculus.</p>
<p>I don't know how to take the class or convince the staff that I could take this class. I've tried to find a community college that offers it during high school but I have found no information on it whatsoever.</p>
<p>What can I do to be able to take this class senior year? And what are the steps in signing up for it and taking it?</p>
<p>Sorry for the kinda long post.</p>
<p>You’re a freshman. Deal with it later.</p>
<p>“there are no faculty members that will grasp the concept of me taking Multivariable Calculus.”</p>
<p>Don’t be so condescending. Most schools have seen everything at some point. </p>
<p>Taking multivariable calculus would be the same as taking any other dual-enrollment class…you take it when it’s offered at the community college, which may or may not be part of your high school day. I would suggest contacting local community colleges and asking if they offer dual enrollment. In my state, the classes are free, but in others they’re not.
(I’m taking all dual enrollment classes during my senior year…I think it’s easier if you finish most of your graduation requirements before your senior year so you don’t have to go back and forth between your high school and the college as much.)</p>
<p>At my school, community college classes are free and taught at the high school by the same teacher that teaches at the college. Some classes aren’t offered though, so you can enroll in an online course through the college. If you talk to guidance at my school, they will put the class on your schedule and you just go to the library to work on your assignments.</p>
<p>I was finished with Calc BC my junior year and took AP Stat my senior year. That could be another option. But, you are only a freshman so it’s nothing you should be worrying about right now.</p>
<p>Alright. I’ll bring this back up around junior year.</p>
<p>You haven’t even taken calculus yet… What if you do bad in it? Will you take multivariae calculus then?</p>