Science Class Dilemma

<p>Hi CC,</p>

<p>This question specifically applies to admissions, so I wrote it here. I am currently a junior at a fairly respected high school, and for college, I definitely want to go into the sciences/engineering at a highly selective school like MIT/Stanford. Below is an outline of my courses, specifically, sciences.</p>

<p>Freshman: Advanced Biology
Sophomore: Advanced Chemistry, AP Physics Mechanics, AP World, AP Calc BC, [AP Stat]
Junior: AP Chemistry, AP Physics E/M, [AP Biology, AP Environmental Science], AP Lang
Senior: [None], AP Lit, AP Comp Sci, AP Micro, Post-45 (US History), Band, Government, Spanish IV.</p>

<p>As one can see, I do not have a science class senior year, because I doubled up on sciences and I have self studied classes that were easy AP's (but boring classes) to potentially get credit. I have all A's (4.000) and have gotten/plan to get 5's on all my AP tests (but that doesn't rly matter during <em>admissions</em>, perse). Our school really does not offer any more science classes (except semester things like anatomy, oceanography, geology, etc...), so will not taking one negatively impact my chances of getting into a good college? My senior courseload doesn't show that I'm slacking off, and I do many science related ECs, but I'm just worried that not having the "class title" will make colleges skeptical about my commitment to science.</p>

<p>Sorry for the semi-long post. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!</p>

<p>Exhausting your school’s AP science offerings should not look bad.</p>