<p>English Lit is also more about how to analyze and interpret literature, while British Lit would be more specifically covering works from Britain. There would probably actually be a required reading list from Collegeboard and the test specifically cover the texts, almost like a history exam. </p>
<p>Instead of reading a passage and answering a question from that passage, questions would be more like:</p>
<p>12) In Jane Eyre, ______________
a. ____
b. ____</p>
<p>They wouldn’t offer AP Algebra/Geometry because most colleges don’t offer these classes, and expect you to know the material by the time you get into college.</p>
<p>Lol at AP Geometry, Algebra, and Trig.
Son if you wanna get college credit for those courses I feel bad for you.
Algebra and Geometry should be learned by the time you’re a freshman in high school.
And trig? You serious? AP Calc AB and BC usually make it so that you don’t have to take trigonometry in college.</p>
<p>If you have taken the AIME, USAMO, or even AMC, I don’t think you really understand HOW complex Algebra and Geometry and Trigonometry really comes beyond what we learn in the basic classes lmao.</p>
<p>AP Philosophy
AP Linear Algebra (I mean, come on, you don’t need Calculus for this!)
AP Anthropology
AP Organic Chemistry
AP Differential Equations
AP Multivariable Calculus
AP Mechanics and AP Particle Dynamics</p>
<p>I second AP Neuroscience and AP Biochemistry, those would be so awesome to have.</p>
<p>I would like a course for analyzing song lyrics, with a focus on hip hop music. Credits earned would be the same as for English literature and composition, and it would be roughly the same class, save that the curriculum would be centered around different material.</p>
<p>The test would consist of a brief multiple choice section, I would say 20 or 25 questions for 4 or 5 selections, and 4 possible prompts for FRQs, from which the test takers would choose 3. Other than these adjustments, this exam would be similar to the English literature exam.</p>
<p>For the AP English 3 summer assignment at our school, in addition to some required literature, we have a list of literary terms with which to make flashcards, and each term must have an example, so I’m drawing all my examples from raps. It’s quite fun, and seeing firsthand that any literary device which you could conceive of is easily found in rap music is… interesting, to say the least, given the stigma that has been needlessly thrust upon it.</p>
<p>Some people write rap off as an unsophisticated cancer of a genre, based on stereotypes derived from the likes of “Rack City” and “Lollipop”. These people fail to realize the irony in this instance, being guilty of such an obvious selection bias.</p>