<p>I already have four years of math. This year I'm taking trig honors. I got signed off for calc AP and I got an A on te first quiz. To be honest I'm considering being a lawyer, and by the slightest chance if it would happen a doctor is a possibility. But my curriculum matches up with more writing and history. Should I take the extra English class to get the college writing credit. I am already in AP English. Or would it look better if I kept calculus?</p>
<p>So “i want to be a lawyer or doctor” usually means… I want a high paying profession but have absolutely no idea what I want to do with my life. I could be wrong, but if this is you do not worry most underclassmen in college change majors 3 times because college is all about finding out who you are.</p>
<p>If the above doesnt apply and you really want to be a doctor with the fallback plan of law school, but have concerns that you might bomb the MCAT or mess up on GPA or be one of the over 50% of qualified applicants that just for some reason does not get accepted to med school then that is fine.</p>
<p>Law school admission today is no joke, getting into some third tier toilet program might not have been that difficult 3 years ago, but today getting into any law school is tough. For this reason alone I would take the writing. Law schools require an essay for admission (that they actually read, unlike many undergrad essays) and they expect for applicants to be great writers. They do not want to hold your hand or give you remedial help while you are taking legal writting (was common not too many years ago.)</p>
<p>Lol yeah idk what I want to do. I’m already a good writer. For me it’s like, I like both classes, I just can’t fit them both.</p>
<p>Flip a coin, one is probably as good as the other.</p>
<p>According to the coin, AP calculus wins :)</p>