<p>i need
4-comm lit/English
4.5-math
5-5.5- science
4- social studies
Foreign language-3.0-4.0
.5- music
.5-art
2-gym/health
Family and consumer science- .5
.5-technology</p>
<p>Minimum of 28 credits to graduate</p>
<p>i need
4-comm lit/English
4.5-math
5-5.5- science
4- social studies
Foreign language-3.0-4.0
.5- music
.5-art
2-gym/health
Family and consumer science- .5
.5-technology</p>
<p>Minimum of 28 credits to graduate</p>
<p>English - 4
Math - 3
Science - 3
Social Studies - 3
Health - 0.5
Physical Education - 0.5
Fine Arts - 0.5
Technology - 1
Career Search - 0.5
Manage Transitions - 0.5
Financial Literacy - 0.5</p>
<p>Minimum of 27 credits to graduate. Foreign language isn’t required.</p>
<p>Wish we only needed .5 for phys ed</p>
<p>We have to take two gym classes, but they’re only worth 0.25 credits each.</p>
<p>Oh we take gym for 1 semester junior and 1 semester senior and then 1 quarter freshman and 1 quarter sophomore. 1 quarter health freshman year and 1 quarter health sophomore. Each semester is .5 credits.</p>
<p>Total: 25</p>
<p>Electives: 5.5
English: 4
Math: 4
Social Studies: 3.5
Science: 3
Technology: 2
Gym: 1
Fine Arts: 1
Health: .5
Speech: .5</p>
<p>We have a total of 43 credits needed. </p>
<p>4 years English= 8 credits
4 years social= 8 credits
3 years math= 6 credits
3 years science= 6 credits
Fine art= 2 credits
Phy Ed= 2 credits
Health= 1 credit
General electives= 10 credits</p>
<p>Basically, every semester of a class you take is a credit (1 semester of gym= 1 credit).</p>
<p>1 credit=1 year
English- 4 credits
Math- 4 credits (Alg1, Geometry)
Science- 3 credits (Bio, Physical Science)
History- 3 credits (must be World, Gvt, and US)
Fine art- 1 credit
Health- 1 credit
Technology- 1 credit
Language- 2 credits OR an extra tech credit (something like that)</p>
<p>English-4
Math-3
Science-3
Social studies-3
Electives/Other-10
=23 total</p>
<p>And because they recently changed the requirements, practically everyone in class of 2014 would have been able to graduate a year early, but most people chose not to.</p>
<p>(We used to be on a block schedule allowing for people to easily double up on classes that have prerequisites ie. taking algebra first semester, then geometry second semester)</p>
<p>● English40
● Math (Must pass 1 year of algebra)00
● Physical Education20
● Foreign Language or Fine Arts10
● Life Science / Biology10
● Earth or Physical Science / Chemistry / Physics10
● World History / Geography10
● U.S. History10
● American Government / Civics & Economics10
● Health5
Total # of Required Subject Credits155
Total # of Elective Subject Credits65
Total # of Credits to Graduate220</p>
<p>^copied and pasted from my school’s website. Oh and 1 semester = 5 credits.</p>
<p>4 Math
4 Science
4 Social Science
4 English
4 Foreign Language
1.5 Computer Science
1 Art
1 PE
0.5 Health</p>
<p>As an international school you can also get the local diploma by taking
0.5 Philosophy
4 Spanish (spanish counts as foreign language)</p>
<p>Pretty straight forward to be honest, I just wished they lowered the art/cpu science and more elective-oriented credits to allow for more doubling up and stuff.</p>
<p>English
20 Credits
Mathematics
15 Credits (20 credits beginning with Class of 2017)
Science
15 Credits
History & Social Science
15 Credits (including U.S. History I and II)
**Electives
37.5 Fine Arts, Foreign Languages, Wellness, Computer and Business
Physical Education
10 Credits
Health
2.5 Credits
Technology
2.5 Credits</p>
<p>A student must pass a minimum of 117.5 credits to graduate
as well as satisfying all requirements listed above.</p>
<p>4 English
3 Math
3 Social Studies
2 Language
2 Science (weird, right?)
2 PE
1 Tech
1 Art</p>
<p>Total: 18 credits</p>
<p>We have two diplomas at my school. A standard (24 credit) and an advanced (26 credit). I’m going for the Advanced one.</p>
<p>4 English
4 Math
4 History & Social Science
3 Foreign Language
2 Health and Physical Education
1 Fine Arts or Practical Arts
2 Electives
1 From Core Areas (Going above the graduation requirements for a subject)
1 Personal Finance or Economics</p>