<p>Hello everyone,</p>
<p>I'm currently a Sophomore (Gr.10) in Canada, and still vacillating between taking AP Calculus AB and BC.</p>
<p>I have a tutor, and I am getting the highest mark in class, despite having a mediocre (but hilarious) teacher (another thing I'm worried about, as he teaches all the calculus classes)</p>
<p>I wouldn't say I'm good at math in doing hard questions, such as those from contests; however my tutor and I make sure I understand everything I need to know thoroughly. I have to spend alot of time and effort maintaining my marks, so I can't say the class is easy.
I believe that I'm quite strong in trigonometry as well.</p>
<p>Math is one of my two favourite courses. :)
That's pretty much my background info...you may ask as well.</p>
<p>So my question is, should I take AB or BC? (Why or why not?)</p>
<p>Thanks in advance,</p>
<p>To me, I found BC hard. But I’m still glad I took it. You’ll learn twice as much :)</p>
<p>Take it, realize it may be hard. Accecpt it. Do your best.</p>
<p>Take BC. It’s not a whole lot more material. Usually get a whole lot more credit.</p>
<p>Take BC.</p>
<p>Unless you’re required to take AB before BC, take BC.</p>
<p>At my school they make you take AB before BC… I have to double up on math classes freshman year</p>
<p>BC. It’s hard, but it’s worth it. I was barely pulling a C first quarter, and now I just might get a B+. It’s the first B+ I’ve been happy to get.</p>
<p>BC is really easy, imo. AB seems harder at my school ahaha</p>
<p>Lol, I thought BC was pretty easy as well… at my school, nobody takes AB and then BC, because we have the AB material taught in a year, and BC just covers AB material first semester and moves on the next semester. So basically our BC class moves twice as fast, lol, but I still didn’t feel like we were rushing through anything… honestly I can’t imagine how AB went any more slowly than we did, lol. Take BC, it’s not bad at all.</p>