junior year schedule--too hard?

<p>AP calc ab (first semester)
AP calc bc ( second semester)
AP statistics
AP comparative gov
AP psych
AP us hist
H english 3
H anatomy and physiology
Online: AP micro/macro economics (yearlong)</p>

<p>We also go on a block schedule so its 4 90 min long periods a day. </p>

<p>Question: Is this schedule too hard to do well?</p>

<p>Calc will be fine. Stats is beyond easy. Psych is a joke class at my school, not sure at yours.
APUSH can be difficult depending if you’re a memorizing person or not.
I don’t know how your english class is taught.
A&P is only difficult for lazy kids (at my school).
My sister enjoys microeconomics, not sure about macro.</p>

<p>As you can tell, I don’t have very substantial evidence of how “difficult” your schedule is. Remember you have to do things outside of school–I have no idea how time consuming those activities are. Have you talked to previous juniors about your class choices?</p>

<p>yeah I talked to a bunch of juniors and they said that the hardest class on my schedule is AP calc bc. Im pretty good at math so I dont think it would be a problem.</p>

<p>AP Calc AB is beyond easy. Some BC concepts were a struggle for me, but I’m confident to say I’ll get a 4+ on the test this may. If you did well in pre-calc, you’ll do fine in ap calc. Just stay on top of things.</p>

<p>If your friends say Calc is the hardest class, then I say go for it.</p>

<p>I feel like the online economics class is overkill. Don’t you have better things to do with your time? The rest looks good though.</p>

<p>Calc BC’s actually fun; don’t let rumours discourage you. I’m taking it as an additional/after-school course this year, and, frankly, it’s not bad! (I’m not really a great person with calculus, but I’m acing all my BC tests with >95%, much to my pleasant surprise!) It’s basic application of AB stuff and basic algebra (eg., slope of y w.r.t t over slope of x w.r.t. will give you slope of y w.r.t. x, as a slope of a parametric eq.). It CAN get a little woozy and it WILL require you to apply your brain, but if you’re that kind of person, then it’s a short drive to a five.</p>

<p>What’s good; a BC subscore of 5 on the external AP exam (which is roughly half AB stuff and half BC stuff) means you automatically get an AB subscore of 5, since, after all, BC is basically applied AB.</p>