APUSH and APMEH

<p>Is it possible to do these 2? It couldn't be that hard right?</p>

<p>Apmeh? ***?</p>

<p>Guess, AP Modern European History. There isn't any point in writing it all out for the title. Using an acronym is better. Don't stray off my original question, please.</p>

<p>You have already said before that they are both too easy for you. You being so so smart, it should be a walk in the park.</p>

<p>Good luck with that. Don't expect to get 5's easily. History AP's are really hard.</p>

<p>
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You have already said before that they are both too easy for you. You being so so smart, it should be a walk in the park.

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</p>

<p>QFT.
Technically it should be APEH, but everyone here simply calls it Euro.</p>

<p>My school calls it AP Modern European History because World History can be confused with it.</p>

<p>Do you mean taking the two classes or taking the two exams?</p>

<p>You're smart, and I'm sure you're perfectly capable of getting 5's on both tests. But I'd ask people at your school what the two classes are like as opposed to asking us because they can give you a better idea of what the workload's like. And I think that's going to be your biggest problem if you try to juggle these two classes. I've no doubt that you can get the concepts and understand what's going on, but history classes involve a lot of reading.</p>

<p>Each of us can tell you what our own experiences have been, but it really depends on the teachers at your school and their styles.</p>

<p>I don't know though...It would make me take 6 difficult APs. My teacher thinks that AP US should absolutely be for 11th grade. I have to talk to my counselor and I think she'll think 6 APs are too much. The smartest group of sophmores are only doing 2 APs at maximum...</p>

<p>What are your other APs? Maybe if you give us an idea of your schedule for next year, we would be able to give you a better-informed decision.</p>

<p>6 APs as a sophomore sounds a little too much for anyone, no matter how smart you think you are. I wonder if the people with 6 APs ever relax?</p>

<p>Masterus, you're the smartest person of your grade level on College Confidential.</p>

<p>You can do it.</p>

<p>6 APs as a sophomore? Unless your school offers like 20 APs, your senior year would consist of 2 open periods, home economics, and earth science (rocks for jocks). Really... take APUSH junior year.</p>

<p>Well, in that case...</p>

<p>Which APs are you taking? Even if I don't know your other APs, I'd still say that taking 6 APs as a sophomore would be too much. Is there any particular reason for the rush? If you exhaust all your APs at your school by the end of junior year, what will you do senior year?</p>

<p>Does your school even let sophomores take so many?</p>

<p>No, my senior year would consist of classes at colleges. I would still have AP English Literature left though. Well, all my classes freshmen year lead into AP, except for English.</p>

<p>I don't think there's a limit as long as you meet the prerequisites.</p>

<p>Depends on the workload @ your school [if the teachers bombard you w/ HW//projects or not]</p>

<p>I'm taking both of those courses right now and doing fine</p>

<p>Don't jump straight into 6 AP's. You'll kill yourself, unless they are the easier ones. The smartest sophomore at my school is taking 4 (AP Physics, AP Calc AB, APUSH, AP US Govt.) and she has no free time. </p>

<p>The workload will vary, but at my school, an APUSH student has to do about 15 hours of work per week. There is lots of reading and writing involved, and its time consuming.</p>

<p>I'm not doing any easy APs...I'm already doing AP courses this year though...</p>

<p>For my APs Sophmore year, I plan to take AP Calculus BC, AP Spanish Language, AP Latin, AP Biology, AP Modern European History. If I add AP US, would it be possible?</p>

<p>Doing AP US Gov. and AP US. History makes both courses easier than taking one of them seperately.</p>

<p>Why don't you save AP U.S. Government and APUSH until junior year when you can take them together, since you said that it'd make more sense to take them at the same time? Plus, AP Bio will also require a lot of textbook reading. So if you take two history classes, that'll make three reading-intense classes.</p>

<p>It's not offered at my school. AP US Gov. and AP Comparative Gov. would require Independent study.</p>

<p>4 reading-intense, Latin is reading intense.</p>