Its pretty good. Do you like French because ap French will probably get you elective credits at a college because you want to do a chemistry/biology major.
Looks good, but I would replace either Anatomy or Forensics with an AP in social science (AP World, AP Euro, AP Gov, AP Econ, AP Psych) or maybe AP Environmental Science.
@goldenbear2020 I can’t take AP World (took it this year), and can’t take AP Psych (regular psych is required before AP), and my school doesn’t offer AP Euro. AP Gov and AP Econ are both year long classes with I have no interest in whatsoever…
Can you take Calc BC as a senior? AP Stats is a step down, math-wise. Plus, taking statistics in college should be a requirement regardless of major (you can even list it under “relevant coursework” on your resume, regardless of your major or internship, it’s that valuable… whereas if you take it in HS, no employer will care what classes you took in high school.) But if you don’t feel like taking BC, or it’s not offered at your school, you can certainly take it.
French (Foreign Language) is considered a “core course”, not an elective. Reaching AP in a foreign language is highly thought-of. Did you forget to write French IV for 11th grade?
I would take AP English Language rather than AP Lit. Both are good classes but AP English focuses on sharpening your writing skills and you’ll use those in every class once in college.
Do take a social science in 12th grade - see if there’s a seminar or topic that seems interesting. Even if it’s a half year class it’ll be important. Selective colleges want 4 years of history/social science.
AP Lit would probably cover two English college-level classes. AP French is a core but I don’t think it has much meaning if OP is doing a chemistry/biology major.
Actually, most colleges only give credit for one semester and only for AP Lang OR AP Lit, except at directionals where few students have that level.
Foreign Language at a high level is a signifier, like calculus (having either one is good, having both is great).
Another reason to take a foreign language up to AP is that it typically waives the college’s foreign language requirement (college graduation), except at some top schools like Yale or Tufts where Level4 or AP is a given. (They do have longer paths for “less prepared” students but it’s that much more to take).
Most students change majors, so unless you apply to “vocational”* majors like engineering or nursing, colleges know you may well change your mind many times and don’t alter their core requirements for that. Only electives should “color” your choices - you typically get two personal picks each year, that’s where you show what interests you outside of core classes: choir? computer science? journalism?..;