<p>Junior year:</p>
<p>AP Calculus AB
AP Chemistry (DP)
AP Physics C Mechanics
AP Psychology
Honors English 11
Spanish 3
Painting</p>
<p>Junior year:</p>
<p>AP Calculus AB
AP Chemistry (DP)
AP Physics C Mechanics
AP Psychology
Honors English 11
Spanish 3
Painting</p>
<p>Yeah, I think that’s pretty rigorous, but what other classes could you have taken?</p>
<p>Where’s your History class? Perhaps replace one of the AP Science classes with an AP History. Take the additional AP Science class during your senior year.</p>
<p>i think it all depends on what is offered at your school</p>
<p>You need to take a history class. Colleges prefer that you take at least one English, Social Studies/History, Math, and Science class every year of high school. Once you’ve taken care of that, then you can add on other APs and electives.</p>
<p>^To the above: I believe AP Psychology falls under Social Studies. At least, It does in my school.</p>
<p>These are the AP’s my school teaches:
AP Calculus AB
AP Chemistry
AP Psychology
AP Physics C Mechanics
AP US History
AP Statistics
AP English Lit
AP Studio Art</p>
<p>As you can see, I’ve taken all but 3 of those classes. [I took APUSH as a sophomore (5)]. I won’t take AP Studio Art senior year, so I’ll have taken all but one of the AP classes my school offers by the time I graduate. There are no more history classes for me to take at my high school. :-/ Is that a problem?</p>
<p>Colleges won’t see it that way. They want to see the traditional high school history sequence completed.</p>
<p>OP–Have you completed: Global, World, US, and Government/Economics? Students in our local public high school must take 4 years of High School History classes to qualify for graduation.</p>
<p>that looks pretty busy to me</p>