<p>Do colleges look down upon dual enrollment?</p>
<p>I am a junior and I took AP Calculus last year, exhausting my high school's math curriculum. This year I dual enrolled and I took a statistics class at a local university. This semester I was supposed to complete an online stats course but I don't have enough calc knowledge. Will it look bad on my transcript if I don't take a second math class? Do most people usually dual enroll for both semesters?</p>
<p>Please help! Thanks.</p>
<p>It’s not that bad, but you should be taking non-statistics courses unless you plan to major in psychology or statistics. When students complete AP Calculus AB/BC sophomore year they should look to that Calc II/Calc III, differential equations, linear algebra, and any proof-writing class offered. Depending on the school they should have an analysis course (analysis or “advanced calculus”). If I’m not accepted at my state’s magnet, I’ll take Calculus III, Differential Equations at my CC and Discrete Math with my state’s flagship online as a Junior, exhausting my CC’s offerings and the flagship’s online offerings. </p>
<p>Unfortunately the closest non-CC college is more than 30 minutes away so it really doesn’t work out for me to take classes… they also only offer 3 more classes I could take, which likely wouldn’t transfer.</p>