<p>Which are the easiest ones that colleges like? I heard that latin's really hard and math I is really easy but colleges want math II.</p>
<p>Well, if you've taken latin courses in high school then you shouldn't have a problem. Colleges will accept either Math I or Math II. Math II is for students who have already taken trigonometry and pre-calculus. Math I is for students who are currently enrolled in trigonometry or a lower level math class. I decided not to take Math II because I am currently in Trigonometry. My middle school didn't offer Algebra I, so I was stuck taking it my freshman year. I'm still a little bitter about that.</p>
<p>math is definitely the easiest, while language is only easy if you are a native speaker (except Latin of course). the sciences are the next easiest thing, though I wouldn't consider them to be easy at all. Lit can be studied, but is difficult without taking a course. The only other option is the histories, World history and US History, which are difficult, but not impossible considering the generous curve.</p>
<p>Curve?</p>
<p>How is the biology test?</p>
<p>I would assert that Math II is a LOT easier than Math I if you have been taught the material. Math II goes through precalculus, whereas Math I only goes through geometry. The difference, though, is that because Math II is considered "harder," it is given a fairly generous curve, whereas Math I has almost no curve at all. The reality is that the Math II is not written more difficultly than the Math I test, but simply that it covers a year's more material.</p>