How many APs does your school offer?

<p>I'm just curious...because to me, it seems like everyone on this board must go to insane prep schools based on the number of AP classes they are in.</p>

<p>My school offers 4:
English (which I will take this year)
Calculus (took the class last year (as a junior), but I didn't take the test because I was afraid of going straight into Calc 2 in college and not remembering a thing)
Biology
Chemistry</p>

<p>18
Biology, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Chemistry, Computer Science AB, English Language, English Literature, Environmental Science, European History, French Language, U.S. Government and Politics, Music Theory, Physics B, Physics C, Psychology, Spanish Language, Statistics, U.S. History</p>

<p>oh mine offers a grand total of one...AP Calc, available only to seniors, and I'm taking it, but they pretty much told us at the beginning that we won't pass the AP exam anyway</p>

<p>My school has 16 APs, but we are only allowed to take APs starting junior year (unless you're super accelerated in math), and the only APs that are actually available to juniors are AP micro/macro economics, AP Bio and AP US. Unfortunately Econ does not fit into my schedule and I cannot stand biology. So only taking one AP. But senior year = AP world.</p>

<p>Anyways, these are the APs my school offers:
Biology, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Chemistry, Computer Programming, English Literature, European History, French Literature, Macroeconomics, Microeconomics, Physics B, Physics C, Spanish Literature, Statistics, Studio Art, U.S. History</p>

<p>Hmm, I have to think about how many my school has....
US History, US Government, English Lit, English Lang, Statistics, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Biology, Physics C, Computer Science A, Computer Science AB, Spanish Lang, Psychology</p>

<p>Lets see, thats 13 total. A lot of people self study some of the other AP's like Micro and Macro Economics.</p>

<p>lets see</p>

<p>ap economics
ap gov
ap us history
ap macroeconomics
ap calc
ap english</p>

<p>No ap sciences :(</p>

<p>However, you can go to another school for the 2nd half of your day called casa where you can take almost every ap imaginable.</p>

<p>18</p>

<p>US History, US Gov, English Lang., English Lit., Stats, Calc AB, Calc BC, Biology, Physics B, Physics C, Spanish Lang, German Lang, French Lang, World History, Art History, Chemistry, Euro History, and Music Theory.</p>

<p>But they'll offer distance learning for pretty much any of the other ones.</p>

<p>14, but there are independent study programs for the remaining tests.</p>

<p>8</p>

<p>spanish, french, lit, ush, calc, bio, physics, chem</p>

<p>plus classes like stats and e. sci. which they don't specifically call ap and the work is probably just a knotch under the ap load</p>

<p>Here are the ones I know of (there are probably more):</p>

<p>English Language
English Lit
Biology
US History
Physics
Spanish Language
Spanish Lit
Calculus AB
Music Theory</p>

<p>Quite a few students self-study for the chemistry one. We usually have statistics, but not enough students signed up for the course. Next year, they're adding European History.</p>

<p>We also have quite a few IB courses, though several of those are both an AP and an IB course.</p>

<p>I go to a public high school, by the way, and it's no where near the caliber of Troy or Sunny Hills (schools in my diestrict that are nationally ranked.) There are just enough students who go here to offer these courses.</p>

<p>English: Literature, Composition
Math: AB/BC Calculus, Statistics
Science: Chemistry, Physics, Environmental Science
Social Studies: US History, World History, Modern European History, Macro/Micro Economics, American Government, Psychology
Foreign Language: Spanish Language, Spanish Literature, French Language, French Literature, German Language, Latin Literature, Latin: Vergil
Others: Computer Science AB, Art Portfolio</p>

<p>A grand total of... none! (YES!) These are the super awesome joys of attending a small rural school in a poor area. Better yet, let's put that school in NY, so the standardized testing expectations are quite high, and yet, wait, the backwaters of the state really don't live up to such things. (/resentment)</p>

<p>My school offers only 4 AP classes:
AP English ( take it now)
AP Calculus (Take it now)
AP History (never took it)
Ap Environmental Science (took it last year)
Ap Psychology( took it last last year, but there is no more this year)</p>

<p>That's funny that so many of your schools offer AP Environmental Science. At my school, the environmental science class is pretty much the lowest level science offered...borderline resource. Many seniors take it to get in their last science credit, simply because it is so simple. I can't even imagine having an AP version of that class...heh...</p>

<p>Well, we gotta have ecologists and environmentalists etc. We need some people concerned about the future of the planet and I sure don't wanna do it as a career, but I do want some smart people to do it. If it's not AP, it'd be blundering idiots taking charge, but since its AP, smart kids take it at some schools and that way some become interested.</p>

<p>Heh, good point. I don't see an AP version of that class ever happening at my high school though...</p>

<p>European history
American history
U.S Govt and Politics
Biology
Chemistry
Physics
Psychology
English Lit
Calc AB/BC
used to offer environmental but not anymore
they say they offer art history but they really dont</p>

<p>So they really offer 10</p>

<p>My county offers 23.
Art: AP Studio Art, AP Art History
English: AP English
Foreign Languages: AP French, AP German, AP Japanese, AP Latin: Vergil, AP Latin Literature, AP Spanish
Math: AP Calculus AB, AP Calculus BC, AP Statistics
Music: AP Music Theory
Science: AP Biology, AP Chemistry, AP Physics, AP Environmental Science
Social Studies: AP US History, AP Government, AP Micro/Macroeconomics, AP European History, AP Psychology, AP World History</p>

<p>Out of those, my school offers about 18 of them, but which classes make it depends on the request. If the school doesn't have it, you can normally go to another school to take it.</p>

<p>Hmmmm:</p>

<p>AP Calc, AP French, AP Spanish, AP English, AP US, AP Euro, AP Chem, AP Bio, AP Language and Composition, AP Government, AP Stats, and I think that is it. We used to offer AP Econ but the teacher retired and they didn't hire a new one.</p>

<p>So 11. We are a mid-sized suburban public school. </p>

<p>Wow I didn't realize it but I will have taken every AP class that my school offers except AP Spanish, AP Gov, and AP Stats by the time I graduate...cool.</p>

<p>My initial goal going into high school was to take ap french and ap spanish so I could be in SHS and FHS, but that isn't gonna work. I took spanish 2 and french 1 in freshman year and wanted french 2/hon spanish 3 soph year but my counselor told me that taking french would be a waste even though I definitely preferred french. he said colleges prefer spanish because its more standard and that taking up to ap (level 5) of each would take up way too many classes. not to mention that spanish 4/5 are way too hard. i guess my goal hasn't been met :(</p>