AP classes

<p>freshmen year- none
sophmore year - 1 ap
junior year- 2 aps
senior year- 2 aps</p>

<p>is this suffice or no? should i plan to take more?</p>

<p>depends on the school u want to go to
heres mine
freshman: 1
soph: 2-3
jr: 5
senior: 4-5</p>

<p>

</p>

<p>And on the school you come from. Your HS GC will be rating the rigor of your schedule based on what is offered and what other students take.</p>

<p>Like entomom said, it’s all relative on what’s available at one’s school. Ask yourself, would your GC check the box rating rigor of courses as “most demanding”?</p>

<p>

That depends. Are you a good student? Will taking AP Chem and APUSH and AP Calc give you Cs? Then maybe take your foot off the gas pedal and take the schedule you suggested.</p>

<p>Top colleges look for students who push themselves academicallly and achieve. Is it “enough”? Depends on your goal.</p>

<p>You should plan to take as many as you can.</p>

<p>Take what you can handle.
I took/am taking:
9th: 0
10th: 1
11th: 5
12th 6/7</p>

<p>HOLY COWWWW. geezus! that is holy! 6/7? aps? my regular schedule doesn’t even have enough room for that!!! and even 5 aps is frickin beast.</p>

<p>and you took 1 in freshmen year? wow, looks like you were way ahead of the game.</p>

<p>WOW. I’ll probably only take 5 my entire high school career. However, kids in your school probably take a lot more than mine. Most people in my hs will take between 3-7</p>

<p>For me it’s:
9th: 1
10th: 2
11th: 5
12th: 6</p>

<p>AP Bio and AP Chem are both two class periods long, so it would’ve been 2 more APs senior year if that hadn’t been the case. Basically, I took the most APs available to me at any given time. Now worship me! Praise meee</p>

<p>But I think you get the idea. There’s no real reason to think you’ll be at a disadvantage going up against students with 10 or 15+ APs from other schools, which is actually fairly common when applying to more competitive colleges. Just try to take the most difficult course load available at your school if you can. They’ll really pay attention to the rigor of your classes (in the context of your school ofc)</p>