<p>currently i am going to be a junior and have a few questions about an allied health program offered at my high school. i am very interested in health related sciences and would like to become a surgeon.the program is sort of a vo-tech program but is suspossed to be better. it is where u must drop 3 of your classes which for me would be spanish, history, and an elective. the program is loacated at our local hospital and is were students can experience what goes on in a hospital. i would like to be involved in this program but am scared that colleges might not recognize it and if i would be better off just taking all normal classes. </p>
<p>advice would be great</p>
<p>Wow, I'm jealous! If my school offered that I'd definitely want to take it. If you can, I would talk to a counselor/ the people that are doing the program and voice your concerns. They're certainly valid. Missing an elective isn't that bad...but Spanish and History are important. If you've taken 3 years of Spanish already, or could take 3 years by the end of high school, it shouldn't be a problem. Same goes for history, though it's a little less important. Perhaps you could take history or spanish at a local community college in the evening. I did this for a semester of history, once a week for three hours. It was mind-numbingly dull to have to go to school for 9 hours total every Monday, but your schedule seems like it'd be pretty sweet if you just get to help around the hospital instead of taking three classes. You should also ask if the hospital class would give HW. If it didn't, then one community college class shouldn't kill you.</p>