<p>I am currently a sophomore in high school, going to be a junior next year. However, I am leaning towards the option of graduating a year early. I'd take all the required senior classes at the same time though. Throughout my career in school, I have always taken the highest level of classes possible (AP and Honors), as well as AP French, AP Psychology, and Film as electives and I have a 4.0. I think I'm a well rounded student with extra-curriculars, volunteer work, etc that would make me a good contender for colleges.
I'm wondering what universities think about students who have graduated early-is it a big contributor to whether or not they accept the student? or do they treat the student the same way as they would a usual 4 year hs graduate? I'd rather attend a university after hs instead of a junior college or community college, but I don't want to graduate early and then realize that my chances of getting into a university (that I would have otherwise probably would've gotten accepted into having stayed in hs for 4 years) are slim to none.</p>
<p>I've been acting since I was 8 years old and would like to major in acting in college. I'm very experienced as an actor having some professional experience acting on camera/modeling and lots of experience doing shows and acting classes. Ideally, USC, UCLA, Loyola Marymount University, Chapman University, CSU LA, or Cal Poly Fullerton would be my choices. But I don't know what the odds are getting into these schools as an early graduate of high school</p>