<p>I've just been wondering, anyone go to a high school that offers mathematics classes after Calc BC? I think taking Calc II as a junior in high school is impressive enough as it is considering most people think Calc II is the hardest of the three or four Calc classes (the fourth meaning Multivariable Calc). </p>
<p>What classes do they offer? Calc III, Multivariable Calc, Linear Algebra, Differential Equations? If so, how are they? I doubt any school offers Abstract Algebra, Topology, Dynamical Systems or Real Analysis considering those are more of the graduate courses of a Mathematics major but I guess it's not impossible.</p>
<p>Anyway, feel free to share any knowledge you may have; people may want to know more about a class in general.</p>
<p>But there are several online courses that offer Multivariable Calculus for credit. I came across one from the university of illinois at urbana champaign
the tuition is about 1000 for instate students and 1500 for out of state.</p>
<p>I took multi-variable calculus at my HS in senior year. It was more of an informal, lunch-time course (still for a credit), met twice a week. A few of us and the calculus teacher thought it’d be best to have another course for those who finished Calc BC in sophomore or junior year.</p>
<p>This year I hear the teacher’s offering linear algebra and differential equations…</p>
<p>Multivariable calculus is Calc 3. Some colleges call it Calc 3 and some call it multivariate. While most high schools don’t offer Calc 3, you can take it at just about any community college nearby. Usually, differential equations and linear algebra are reserved for your sophomore/junior years in college. It would be pointless to teach those in high school because very few high school students are at that level.</p>
<p>Wow, that’s insane guys. My school only offers AB. It’s funny too because we only had three 5’s, but a ton of 4’s and a couple 3’s (class of about 20). It’s always kind of neat to see how far some students push themselves and when even better when they succeed. Something like this would never happen at my school, we’re to poor. Haha.</p>
<p>At my school we have Distance Learning Calculus with Ga Tech which is Calc II and Linear Algebra first semester (even though we have 5s on BC, we can’t test out of this because of Linear Algebra) then Calc III second semester. It is taught by a Tech professor and it’s the real college course so that’s pretty cool.</p>
<p>Nothing. My school doesn’t even care about offering rigorous classes. The highest they offer is BC, and about 7 students take it every year. After that, you’re pretty much screwed…</p>
<p>My school has IB as opposed to AP and up until this year students could go up to IB Math year 2 SL. About five students (me included) finished IB Math SL last year as juniors and are now going to work toward AP Calc AB. (IB Math SL covers many areas, including statistics, vectors, matrices, derivatives, integrals, and probabilities, but not as in-depth as calc-focused classes I suppose.) However, my point is that we were also offered the option of studying for the IB Math HL exam, which is apparently very difficult. Not sure how it compares to these classes.</p>
<p>My school offers Multivariable Calc aka Calc III. It’s all seniors in there, with about 15 people per year. It’s a complete joke though, they move extremely slowly, and while they -do- learn, it’s very relaxed.</p>
<p>My school offers Multivariable Calculus (Semester 1) and Linear Algebra (Semester 2) for a select few seniors; I’d say there are about 20 or so. :)</p>