@MYOS1634, it’s really not as easy as many people assume to take college courses. Aside from the cost, transportation and scheduling can very easily be prohibitive. You vastly underestimate how difficult it is to schedule a college class around a high school schedule.
My daughter was able to do it for one semester, by taking 2 study halls. It was costly, commuting was very time-consuming, and inconvenient. Scheduling meant she had to take a class that wasn’t really the right one for her but was the only one possible, she had to drop a hs EC, and she was not able to go to any of the prof’s office hours, which was not a good situation for her. The other semester there was not a single class she could schedule even though she was willing to do either foreign language or several different STEM classes. None of them met at the time slot she had carved out of her high school schedule. Yes, transportation was a major issue. We ended up buying another car. It’s ridiculous to suppose that colleges expect that.
My younger daughter will finish BC as a junior. I sure hope she won’t have cc-like people telling her that she won’t get into good colleges if she takes AP stats or something like that because that will show them that she is both a slacker and an AP-grubber. Since she is potentially interested in psych I think it is the most useful thing she could do with the extra time slot.