<p>1 sophmore (world history)
3 junior (u.s. history, bio, physics b)
3 senior (gov. euro, lit)</p>
<p>no more than 12
10th- govt and world history
11th- AP spanish, bio, english lang, and USH in school and perhaps self-study comparative govt and psych
12th- literature, spanish lit, calculus, chem</p>
<p>Six classes, I'm not sure how many tests. I've already self-studied two, so at least eight.</p>
<p>Twelve tests by graduation.</p>
<p>2 soph 5 junior 5-6 senior (prolly skip and play b ball or somethin most my classes in senior year) NO SELF STUDYS!!!!! I am not sure if they should count. The classes often can be much harder than the test.</p>
<p>I am just wondering that if the college you get into doesn't accept ap credits, say most ivy league schools, what is the point of taking the ap's? Do the schools care that much about ap scores vs. ap classes taken? I mean, in my opinion, the number of ap classes you take would help you get into college while the ap scores you get would help you skip some really dumb classes.</p>
<p>well ap scores help prove that the class isn't just a joke and that you actually learned the information.</p>
<p>Soph - 2
Jr - 6
Sr - 5</p>
<p>13 in total</p>
<p>1 soph, 2 junior, and probably something like 3 or 4 senior.
But I'm also taking college math as a junior, so it sort of makes up for it I guess.</p>
<p>I would have taken 10 (Euro, Stat, Chem, US, English, Lit, Spanish, Bio, Calc BC, and US Gov) by the time I graduate. Instead of bio, I wanted Spanish lit and psych, but my schedule was messed up. I'll get over it. </p>
<p>I also wish I had known about self studying. I would've liked to try out world, econ, human geo, comparative politics, Spanish lit, and psych.</p>