<p>Including your current school year</p>
<p>Senior with a total of 20 Honor classes throughout my school career.</p>
<p>Including your current school year</p>
<p>Senior with a total of 20 Honor classes throughout my school career.</p>
<p>None.
My school doesn't offer any. :(
We also only have 3 AP courses.
I'm a senior.</p>
<p>Sophomore now
Honors: 9
AP: 2</p>
<p>7 high school honors classes, 8 high school AP classes, 4 college honors classes. I'm assuming we're not supposed to include things like "GATE" classes...</p>
<p>Our school doesn't offer honors and only offer 9 APs. I am taking 7 this year.</p>
<p>D will have taken 14 honors (16 possible max with those missed replaced by AP) and 6 AP (out of 9 offered and only 8 actually were held).</p>
<p>8 if I remember correctly. Only APs offered are Spanish, German, Calculus, and English. Only took Calc AP because that's the only one I like!</p>
<p>Ninth grade: 4 out of 4 honors
This year, tenth grade: 2 out of 2 honors, 2 out of 1 AP (self-studying AP Psych)
So 8 so far. (Should be 9 but bloody new school doesn't offer any honors science classes.)</p>
<p>I have taken 6 freshman year, 6 sophomore, 5 junior (plus 2 APs) and 6 senior (again, 2 APs). My school has a lot of them, apparently.</p>
<p>Uh...well...</p>
<p>Freshman year: 4 honors classes (my school doesnt have many honors classes for freshman, i took all that i could)</p>
<p>Sophomore year: Full Pre-IB course load (the international baccalaureate middle years program, all of which my school considers honors)</p>
<p>Junior Year: Full IB course load (all honors)</p>
<p>Senior Year: dropped IB because my school only offers Standard Level Mathematics (fledgling IB program, in it's third year) and I wanted to take more rigorous mathematics, so I opted for AP Calculus instead...among three other AP's...we have five classes per trimester....</p>
<p>Do you suppose that this is even seen as being a very rigorous schedule?</p>
<p>well adcoms are going to know how many honors, IBs and AP classes your school offers. So you should be fine.</p>
<p>honors: 5 honors so far, 1 more senior year
APs: 5 so far, taking 3 more senior year
IBs: 1</p>
<p>I hope everybody responding to this thread realizes that the question is irrelevant. The number of honors classes you took compared to other people here on CC makes no difference in college admissions, it is the number of honors classes you took compared to the number offered at your HS that matters.</p>
<p>My school offers only honors courses and has a fixed curriculum... so...</p>
<p>32, lol.</p>
<p>I ran into questions like this a lot last summer at governor's school in NC. Naturally, with lots of kids there who are really good in school, we had conversations like how many honors/how many AP, and, since we all came from different schools, it was all really different. At some schools, three APs total was a lot; at others, taking 5 or more per year was totally normal. There's a huge range. It doesn't make sense to compare. </p>
<p>But, it is interesting to see how many are offered at other schools. At my school, I will have taken 7 APs out of about 10 (varies by year), but it's also quite literally impossible to take all of them at my school because of scheduling (for example, stats and english, both senior classes, are both first block). I've taken about fifteen honors classes, which is a lot, but out of loads more (I don't know how many, maybe 30); it's a big school, on a block schedule, and there are scheduling limitations.</p>
<p>You guys are lucky.. there were barely any honors classes available at my school..</p>
<p>My school offers only 4 honors classes, but these honors classes are truly honors-level. The honors chemistry class I'm taking this year covers almost exactly the same concepts as the AP Chem class. </p>
<p>Freshman: 2 honors
Sophomore: 2 honors, 1 AP
Junior: 3-4 AP's
Senior: 3-4 AP's</p>
<p>Well. I've almost maxed out the (sorta) limited honors and AP curriculum at my school (only offers 6 APs plus AP Art). So, </p>
<p>13 Honors (Freshman: 4, Sophomore: 5, Junior: 3, Senior: 1)
5 APs. (Junior: 2, Senior: 3) </p>
<p>It's interesting to see how versions of "highly rigorous" course-loads differ from school to school. Good thing colleges have to compare you to school offerings and not the insane schedules of other applicants!</p>