<p>I got a 4 on my chemistry ap test which exempted me from taking 6A general chemistry. It says i can take 6AH for credit. Should i go that route or go directly to 6B. (or is that even possible to do)</p>
<p>i am going to be a human bio major which the lower division requirements only need 6A-B-C and BL</p>
<p>Could you even apply for classes as an incoming freshmen yet?</p>
<p>if you're human bio, possibly pre-med and need good grades across the board, aren't really of the theoretical mindset and don't like the idea of staring down multivariable improper integrals on your chem 6ah midterm, just take chem 6b.</p>
<p>of course it's possible to take chem 6b. your AP score of 4 = chem 6a credit = can't take 6a anymore = figure out the rest.</p>
<p>Do people even get A's in honors chem 6a? If so, how many. And instead of bits and pieces of horror situations, can somebody please describe the class in depth? Something that is informative, please. Thanks.</p>
<p>sigh.</p>
<p>tabsycoist, have you bothered used the search query with '6ah' as the keyword? it returns something like 67 results, most of which are pretty insightful. and i don't know how many people have noted the trend, but the class size from 6AH to 6CH drops dramatically (mine was like 90 to 40) as people realize the honors series isn't worth their time and effort. </p>
<p>and if all this isn't good enough, i suggest you go ahead and audit 6AH lectures during the first few weeks. since that class NEVER fills to capacity, you're more than welcome to switch into it.</p>
<p>knugget- no i can't but i'm researching what classes i should take based on ap credit when I choose classes in about a month </p>
<p>thanks guys.</p>