Here are the classes I might take for junior year.
DE English 101/ DE English 102
Honors Pre-Calculus
AP U.S. History
DE General Biology/ DE Environmental Biology or biology E
French Advanced (3) (no honors available)
AP Psychology / AP Microeconomics
I plan to take these AP exams:
AP U.S. History
AP Psychology
AP Microeconomics
AP Environmental Science
AP English language
BTW I am take these classes this summer
DE Business 101
DE Financial Planning and Investments
Defiantly good enough. It looks really hard, though. By saying you will take those AP exams (Except for AP U.S. History), are you self-studying them? Because if you are really planning on self-studying those AP exams, I only recommend none or one.
DE general biology will prepare you for AP bio. Beware that general biology tends to be the first course taken by premeds and can be cut throat.
You don’t need to take the apes exam nor the environmental science class in the spring.
I don’t think you should switch to Enviro Sci in spring, but go with the Bio E that you listed. If you take bio all year and then take the AP Bio test (instead of Enviro), you could potentially earn college credit and not have to take the class, avoiding what @MYOS1634 described.
Maybe you should consider not taking the Lang test, because 4 AP tests is a lot to study for, and a lot to take within a 1 or 2 week span. Micro, Psych, Bio (or Enviro, if you choose to go that route), and APUSH seems like a good amount.
That being said, this is your decision, and you don’t really have to take my advice. Either way, good luck next year! Speaking as a current junior, make sure not to stretch yourself too thin (like I have).
I just bumped three points down because you are not on the advanced math track. You haven’t gotten to calculus yet in junior year. That might bring you down in comparison to your peers
Actually, calculus senior year is advanced math track. Honors is precalculus honors senior year. Regular is Algebra2.
Some schools have “more than calculus” classes but they’re not common. High performing schools offer super accelerated tracks that include choices like Differential Equations or Multivariable calculus but they represent a minuscule number compared to schools that struggle filling the precalculus honors classes.
Most students going to 4-year colleges only got to precalculus honors, with those going into Engineering/Math having had Calculus senior year.
Some high schools have a slow calculus track and fast calculus track (you take EITHER AP Calc AB OR AP Calc BC senior year) and some high schools have a 2-year calculus sequence where students who are advanced enough to start calculus junior year take Calc AB junior year, Calc BC senior year.