<p>9 in total</p>
<p>1 in soph
3 in junior
5 in senior</p>
<p>9 in total</p>
<p>1 in soph
3 in junior
5 in senior</p>
<p>nine, although if you count micro and macro as separate subjects, then i have ten. ap econ is just one year long class at my school</p>
<p>and btw, seashoresideshow.. i happen to really enjoy my AP classes. a good teacher knows how to prepare for the exam but still design an interesting, stimulating, and comprehensive course.</p>
<p>We're very different people, thatgirl. I don't find AP Statistics particularly interesting or stimulating. AP World History was interesting, but my teacher had to sideline more interesting topics in order to include all the AP material. AP forces the teachers to teach the test, which for me ruins the classes.</p>
<p>Probably....4-6 depending on whether or not I take the governments, even though I'm doing a full Poly Sci class. But I'll have a lot more that are college level, but just don't match up with AP. I'd rather take what interests me.</p>
<p>3 junior year, 3 senior year </p>
<p>reasons: no aps for sophomores, and my interest areas are languages and history (so i have to take the first three years of the languages before AP, which consequently i will not get too)</p>
<p>six. gov euro stats english pysch ushistory.</p>
<p>Maybe 3, 4 at the most. No need to go nuts.</p>
<p>AP Biology
AP Government
AP Economics
AP English</p>
<p>4 APs.</p>
<p>
[quote]
This thread is ridiculous. Why do you people take so many? The AP curriculum sucks out any enjoyment one might receive from taking a subject. I've found that I actually learn much more in non-AP courses.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>I typically prefer AP courses, just because in my experience AP teachers assign less homework than honors teachers and I end up with more time to actually study the material. Which usually makes me like it better.</p>