college of engineering help!

<p>could someone please give me an idea of where these ap credits would take me?
ive looked through the list already but the credits for some of the humanities were not very clear.
plz tell me which courses i'd be able to get out of with these scores.</p>

<p>Calculus AB, BC - 5
Physics B - 5
Physics C - 5,5
US History - 5
Chemistry - 5
English Lang - 4
Government and Politics - 4
English Lit - 4
Statistics - 5
Macroecon - 4</p>

<p>Some of the scores are projected scores of what i'd be taking but im pretty sure my score would be pretty close to what is written above.
also do u think i can pass the math 1920 departmental exam? taking two years of calculus really gave me a solid idea of basic calculus so i was wondering if i can test out of 1920.
thank you.</p>

<p>[Cornell</a> Engineering : Advanced Placement Credit Table](<a href=“http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/student-services/academic-advising/academic-information/ap-credit/ap-credit-table.cfm]Cornell”>http://www.engineering.cornell.edu/student-services/academic-advising/academic-information/ap-credit/ap-credit-table.cfm)</p>

<p>Definitely:
Calculus AB, BC - 5 MATH 1910<br>
Physics C - 5,5 MATH 1112 and 2213
Chemistry - 5 CHEM 2090
Statistics - 5 No credit</p>

<p>Presumably
Based on a cursory read through of the general information in the courses of study, could be wrong, I didn’t take any non math science ap exams
US History - 5 HIST 1530 and 1531, if I’m reading it right you only get 4 credits though
English Lang - 4 I think you can use this as 3 liberal studies credits, not sure though
Government and Politics - 4 GOVT 1111?(there were two listings for gov and politcs, one said U.S. and one said comparative, not sure the difference, comaprative said it got you credit for GOVT 1313)
English Lit - 4 I think you can use this as 3 liberal studies credits, not sure though, may not be able to double up this and english lang also, but that is entirely speculation
Macroecon - 4 ECON 1120</p>

<p>Who cares
Physics B - 5 You already have credit from Physics C, no extra credit</p>

<p>Not that it matters, but out of curiosity, why did you take both AB and BC Calculus? At least from the CollegeBoard website, it looks like BC pretty much includes all of AB within its curriculum…</p>

<p>Passing the 1920 departmental exam will be damn near impossible for someone self studying. I recommend taking the class, unless you have absolutely nothing else to do this summer and want to completely dedicate yourself to it.</p>

<p>US History gives you 4 credits for HIST 1530 in Engineering.</p>

<p>Check your transfer credit report on jtf.cornell.edu</p>

<p>Calculus AB/BC - MATH 1910
Physics C - PHYS 1112, 2213
US History - HIST 1310
Chemistry - CHEM 2090
English Lang/Lit - you need a 5 to get out of a FWS but it may count as liberal studies. Might want to check.
Government and Politics - GOVT 1111
Statistics - AEM/ILR/PAM stats
Macroecon - ECON 1120</p>

<p>I had most of the same credits as you (no econ,stats,or us hist but I had bio, euro hist, and art history). Ended up accepting almost all my credits except for Phys C. PHYS 2214 has MATH 2930 as a pre-req so I just retook PHYS 2213 for the easy A GPA boost.</p>

<p>thx. haha.
i took ab junior year and bc senior year, which is kinda dumb.</p>

<p>but can anyone tell me what’s in math 1920?
is there something beyond calculus bc? stuff like gradient and iterated integrals?
also would it be better to take the credit for physics C or retake?
thank you.</p>

<p>Are you sure you know what 1920 is? It’s called multivariable calculus, also known as vector calculus. From the course description: “Introduction to multivariable calculus. Topics include partial derivatives, double and triple integrals, line integrals, vector fields, Green’s theorem, Stokes’ theorem, and the divergence theorem.”</p>

<p>As for physics, I recommend skipping 1112 and taking 2213 for an easy A, as swuster and I have both done.</p>

<p>1910 is equivalent to BC btw, Cornell assumes all engineering students have taken at least basic calculus. 1920 is completely different. Its multivariable calc, which takes what you learned in BC and extrapolates it to more variables. So no you won’t have a chance of passing the 1920 departmental exam unless you teach yourself all the material in 1920.</p>

<p>oh ok…
didn know 1920 was multivariable calculus haha.</p>

<p>would i be screwed if i just take the credit for 2213?
because i don really feel like taking it again…</p>