<p>Freshman:
Geometry(half a semester)
Adv. Geometry(half;I moved up)
English I
Physics-G(accelerated)
Global Civics
Chinese B
Health
Jazz Band</p>
<p>Sophomore:
Adv. Algebra II/Trig.
English II
Accelerated Chemistry
AP World History
Chinese III(skipped Chinese II)
Sports Medicine
Athletic Intensity(P.E. requirement)
Jazz Band</p>
<p>Junior:
Analysis(Adv.)
AP Biology
AP United States History
Chinese IV(Adv.)
Jazz Band
Writing Seminar/Shakespeare
(Possible AP Lang Self Study, JHU CTY)</p>
<p>Senior:
AP Calculus BC
AP Micro/Macroeconomics
AP English Literature
Chinese V( Adv.)
AP Chemistry
Jazz Band Honors</p>
<p>Also would AP Microeconomics and Macroeconomics be counted as separate APs because I wanted to try for the National AP Scholar award.</p>
<p>I’m also taking AP Macro/Microeconomics, and I think it’s only counted as one AP since you’re taking them both this year. I received the National AP Scholar award last month, as did a lot of my friends. It’s based on your AP exam scores, so if you have taken all these exams already and received an average score of 3 on 5 or more of them, then you should have already received the award.</p>
<p>Thank you for replying. I’m currently in my sophomore year of high school and I haven’t even taken my world history ap exam yet. Do you have any tips?</p>
<p>Oh, I see. Are these your estimated schedule for the following years, or are they already set? Unfortunately, I didn’t take the AP World exam, so I can’t help you with that test specifically. However, I do know that for the history AP exams, a majority of the exam will be on topics after a certain time period, so you should try to find out (it’s available online) and focus mainly on the major themes after that time period.</p>
<p>Yes, this is my estimated schedule for junior and senior years as well as the the classes that I am taking currently and the ones that I have taken last year. Also thank you for the advice ,and I would like to ask you what you think of my schedule in terms of rigor.</p>
<p>It certainly looks like a challenging schedule! It seems you have the recommended history and language covered off while including some sciences. If you do gain admission to Princeton, you’ll be glad for the extensive course work you’ve done in preparation! The reason they want to see a very challenging course load is because the work you are required to do there is incredibly intense.</p>
<p>Thank you for your post! It is greatly appreciated!</p>