<p>@Neurogirl07 I mean that’s more power to you lol. That would be great, but AP Calc BC is a WHOLE different ball game. You can’t just expect a high grade because of the grades you have gotten in the past. Unless your mom is a college math professor or an AP Calculus teacher, I don’t buy that she can just “tutor you”. AP Calculus is one of the most rigorous courses you will take in both high school and college. I just think you need to be a little more realistic. </p>
<p>And even still OP, everything else outside of math except for Psych and Gov are still projections so it’s hard to make an accurate chance me. That’s the only think I wanna do. I want to help, and I want to be as accurate as possible.</p>
<p>@KiaraInNYC I’ve taken AP Physics B, and in all honesty I think that was much harder than AP Calc BC. I passed my pre-calc class with a 96.4%… And my mom DOES teach AP Calc so I’m pretty sure I’m set </p>
<p>As for my projections… The most I can say is that I study hard and after handling 5 AP classes this year (and still maintaining a 4.0 unweighted) I think I will be able to handle 3 APs next year. Thanks for your help though :)</p>
<p>It all depends on how well you package your ECs. You need to have better, more consistent ECs. Princeton and Columbia as well as Penn are easily reaches based on your stats. UChicago would be as well. The rest are low reaches and/or high matches.</p>
<p>KiaraInNYC’s school has little AP course to offer (check her previous post), I wonder how would she comments on them. You would know a lot more than her about AP.
AP Calc BC is fine. Over 45% of students get a 5 anyway. If you are doing fine in your class, you should be able to get a good score.</p>