Math Class equivalent help

<p>Hi there, so me and my friend are pretty ahead in math at our school, and i was just wondering if colleges will give me credit for these classes.
9th grade Honors Precalculus
10th Ap Calc BC
11th Advanced Calc
12. Differential equations</p>

<p>link to more information on Advanced Calculus: BSD</a> Advanced Calculus
<a href="http://scidiv.bellevuecollege.edu/DH/AdvCalc/AdvCalc_note.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://scidiv.bellevuecollege.edu/DH/AdvCalc/AdvCalc_note.pdf&lt;/a>
Link to course info on Dfq:
BSD</a> Differential Equations</p>

<p>Differential equations is supposed to be a honors 300 level math class at the University of Washington. It is equivalent to Princetons 305 DFQ class. I was wondering if colleges would like the fact that I am taking DFQ. Also what do you think my chances of getting credit for these colleges are ( ie. elite universities)
if you guys want heres a link to our entire course catalog.
<a href="http://www.bsd405.org/portals/0/curriculum/Coursecatalog/HS%20courses/BSD%20HS%20Catalog.pdf%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.bsd405.org/portals/0/curriculum/Coursecatalog/HS%20courses/BSD%20HS%20Catalog.pdf&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>It would be nice if you could share your opininons about wether me and my friend would get credit, because according to our teacher, if we take 1 year of math our freshman year, we should have reached all math requirements for a math major. I was wondering for universities like Princeton, Harvard, MIT, Stanford etc.</p>

<p>cmon, any advice would be useful</p>

<p>They’ll give you credit for 5 (probably 4) on the AP Calc BC exam, and possibly credit for the advanced calculus and differential equations classes. You can’t guarantee this. For instance, Cornell’s math department won’t give credit for a high school class taught to primarily high school students, even if it’s listed on a college transcript.</p>

<p>As someone who was looking into being a math major (decided to try CS instead), even “advanced calculus” (probably multivariable/vector calculus) and differential equations may not satisfy all the lower-division prerequisites for a math major. Math majors will most likely have to take linear algebra in addition to those, and some schools (I’m looking at you, Berkeley) also require a discrete math class.</p>

<p>Thank You for your response! Feeling alot of stress with college decisions coming in another couple of days. I have gotten in ea Berkeley and Stanford, should have applied earlier to mit. Well its good to know i’ll get some credits. thanks again!</p>