<p>My unofficial transcript currently has 30 credit hours but once I get my History credits added (I don't know why they've been left out) I'll have 36. How many hours have you guys gotten?</p>
<p>If I would have attended my public flagship, I would have began as a second semester sophomore. But I chose to attend a top LAC and they cap AP credit at a maximum of four course credits (one semester), so I am going into college with one free semester.</p>
<p>Exemption from physics 1 (mechanics), calculus 1, and having to take a writing course.
87 MIT credits, which is 7.25 classes.</p>
<p>41 credits. Makes me a sophomore.</p>
<p>I passed all of my 13 AP tests this year with a 4 or better. I’ll be going into college with 51 course credits.</p>
<p>9 credits = sophomore. I’m just excited I get a better crack at classes.</p>
<p>35 credits total, but only 30 credits that count for something (5 credits are towards pre-calc, which really doesn’t mean anything in my major)</p>
<p>This is with 4 APs</p>
<p>Rising high school Junior </p>
<p>AP Art History (9th)+AP Calculus BC (10th)+AP Physics B (10th)+9 hours in DE Spanish (10th)=Rising High School Junior with 24 hours of credit. How much am I actually expecting (my 10th grade AP grades aren’t available)? 16 hours</p>
<p>At this point I’m going to forget APs, take DE courses, and graduate with ~70 hours of college credit (64 that will transfer) for free, forget APs.</p>
<p>skipping Calc 1, History, Chemistry, and an English class. That gets me out of 4 classes for 16 units making me a second semester freshman. All my other AP’s only go towards units that really don’t help me.</p>
<p>29 credits. </p>
<p>Calculus I & II (8 credits)
Introductory Chemistry I & II (8 credits)
Freshman writing (3 credits)
Random english class (3 credits)
Biology I (4 credits)
Elements of Statistics (3 credits)</p>
<p>I am a sophomore.</p>
<p>66 credits baby!</p>
<p>Does anyone know when the CollegeBoard will start sending to colleges?</p>
<p>^ They already have. My school already got them and posted them.</p>
<p>you have to be careful taking so many credits. if you take THAT many credits you will be expected to graduate early. if you don’t graduate early then YOUR FINANCIAL AID WILL RUN OUT. and you’ll be stuck junior&senior year paying for credits/transferring because most people can’t afford it.</p>
<p>i’ve said this a lot, but a lot of people don’t know this.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>This isn’t necessarily true. At all the schools in my state, and I’ve called an asked, you apply as a freshman and have as much right to stay 4 years as the next guy.</p>
<p>D1 had 58 credits. She’ll be there for 4 years, but she’s double-majoring, and will also have a foreign language minor. No issues regarding forced early graduation or anything of the sort.</p>
<p>D2 is a bit more normal, and has 33 credits, which mostly satisfies the general requirement courses. </p>
<p>At their large public U, having the credits moves them up in priority for registration—registration dates are assigned based on your total credits; of course the first registration all the freshmen are at the bottom of the heap, but it will help going forward.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>i mean you can stay there as long as you want. i didn’t mean the school will force you to graduate early, it’s just that without financial aid many people can’t afford to go to school. basically i’m saying that fin. aid runs out after a certain number of credits.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>moves you up in registration at my large private school too, but i know that my financial aid runs out after a certain number of credits.</p>
<p>the number of credits will be beyond what a typical program calls for, but the people taking like 40 college credits should be careful.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Financial aid does not run out after “x” number of credits, it runs out after a certain number of years. Now there is a tuition surcharge in many areas if you exceed your program by y%.</p>
<p>Just checked, in my state the tuition is not effected by AP credits.</p>
<p>same for us…financial aid counts for years spent as an undergraduate, so the # of credits won’t figure into it.</p>
<p>I’ve never heard of anywhere that it runs out after a certain number of credits…</p>
<p>89 credits, using either 45 or 60.</p>