<p>Freshman year:
Chorus
CLC
Advanced Ninth Grade Literature
Advanced Biology
Music Appreciation
Math 2 (regular)
Gym/health (mandatory)
Advanced World Literature </p>
<p>Sophomore:
Chorus
Chemistry
APUSH (2 semesters)
Math 2 (2 semesters)
Art
Advanced World Literature </p>
<p>Junior:
Spanish 1
Math 3
AP Government
AP Language
AP Psychology
Advanced Physics </p>
<p>Projected Senior Year:
AP Biology
Spanish 2
AP Economics
AP Literature
Math Four
Chorus
Film Study (After School)<br>
SAT Prep (After School)</p>
<p>I'm afraid regular Math And Chemistry are going to bring down my application academics wise for more competitive schools.</p>
<p>What exactly is math 4? At my school, we just go by Pre-Calc, Calc, etc.
Mostly, it depends what your school offers and where you’re applying. That’s what a counselor report is for. If you took the most challenging course load offered by your school, you’re all set. Taking seven AP classes in a school that only offers 7-10 or so is awesome. If your school offered every AP class there is, that might be a different story.</p>
<p>What kind of schools are you looking at? If your school offered honors/AP math and chemistry courses that you didn’t take advantage of, I’m afraid it won’t help you, since course rigor is looked at along with your transcript by admissions officers. But if you don’t plan on going into the STEM field I guess it’s not a huge deal. Perhaps you also should’ve started taking a foreign language a little earlier (disregard this if CLC was a foreign language class). But you seem to be right on track for being a humanities major, so that’s good. </p>
<p>Overall, your courseload seems to be pretty rigorous but not the most. But that’s fine! 7 AP’s is still a super impressive number. Good luck!</p>
<p>The only course I’ve dropped down to is regular chemistry. (Math is tracked and since I wasn’t in advanced in middle school I had no way of being in it in high school. I would have been waaaaaay behind)</p>
<p>math is integrated in Georgia so its all the math classes combined into one. 4 is where we start to integrate calculus and such, its really confusing to explain to people who don’t have it lol. </p>
<p>The block schedule also makes it a little more difficult for AP’s because since we only have four classes a semester, it makes it impossible to take more than 2-3 year long classes + required classes.
I’ll have taken 7/11 AP classes.</p>