<p>Here are the math's that I am going to be taking for the rest of my high school career, I would like to know what the difficulty is like and what grades I can expect to receive in each class (like what most people get). I didn't do all that great at Algebra but my teacher was semi-incoherent, so I assume that I will have teachers that can actually teach the following subjects. </p>
<p>Algebra II (Will there be a review of Algebra I?)</p>
<p>There are probably an equal amount of people who fail Algebra II as there are people who receive A+'s, so to “predict” your success based on averages is next to impossible. As @halcyonheather said, you’re gonna have to learn how to deal with different teachers. My Geometry teacher Freshman Year spoke little English, and I had to make due, and I still passed the course with an A. A teacher’s supposed incompetence doesn’t excuse mediocrity.</p>
<p>deTURMANed22,
The modern textbook provides incredibly detailed examples and hand-holding. Even if the teacher is horrible, you should be able to teach yourself. The teacher might be semi-incoherent, but the algebra and its emphasis on rules, should be crystal clear.</p>
<p>Say your algebra level is fair. This I would imagine translates to a C/C+ (removing grade inflation). Up next is Algebra II? My advice? In the next three months, utilize every lunch break and after school hour to get help from the math teacher who are coherent. Before you being Algebra II, your algebra I had better be in pretty decent shape (your understanding at a B+ level of better). Understanding, not performance. </p>
<p>Trig and Pre-Calc (often taught together) will be a quantum leap for those having difficulty in intro Algebra. So again, utilize every tutorial opportunity to get your Algebra II understanding to B+ or better. </p>
<p>Once you have Pre-Calc down, everything is really frosting on the cake and/or relevant for science/engineering/math majors.</p>
<p>At this stage, you ought to overweight algebra in your remaining months of this academic year.</p>
<p>You can do it. but it is going to take a good deal of sweat equity to invest. But one step at a time.</p>
<p>It really depends what your high school is like. At my school, basically all the math courses are pretty hard but still doable. Im in Algebra 2 right now and we did a quick review of Algebra 1 to start the year so I assume most other schools would do that as well.</p>
<p>You have to learn to deal with all types of teachers. My geometry teacher didn’t do anything in class, we just sat there and played on our phones, but he gave us Olympiad questions. You have to learn to self study for some of your classes. I’m assuming you mean B-/C+ in Algebra 1, so your Algebra 2 grade would probably be a C/C+ and Precal grade would be a C/C+. Calculus probably will be a C unless you choose to improve.</p>