<p>@Poseur: that sounds pretty odd you know. I’ve always had this idea that US teachers are top-notch. An AP teacher having no clue about the material is plain… impossible.</p>
<p>If I could mess around with my schedule without regard for graduation requirements, I would replace English with Great Books (English has been a waste of time so far because my class is quite raucous) and Health with PE. I have Health the exact quarter in which the PE class is playing volleyball. :(!</p>
Hah! Not the case - my AP physics B teacher last year… he… was IMPOSSIBLE. He was an engineer for ~30 years [so I suppose he at least knows what he’s doing for some parts of it… ] and then, out of the blue, decided, “hey, I’m going to be an AP physics teacher since it’s SOOOOOO ridiculously easy to get certified!” awuefoaiwf. Terrible terrible decision. Anyway, not only could he not teach the stuff to save his life, what he did manage to teach was WRONG. Ulkawefoiawef.</p>
<p>I’d drop Math Methods (IB math). Not because it’s inherently hard, but because half our grades thus far are from Algebra review the first two days of school, and I’d basically spent my entire summer elsewhere, not thinking about math. And the teacher, while hilarious, doesn’t really teach you anything. Arrggg.</p>
<p>i would DEFINATELY drop my honors physics class. my teacher is intent on us learning our lessons the hard way, all of them. even if that means failing the first 100 point lab. he also refuses to give straight answers to any of our questions, but rather speaks to us in riddles. he’s intent on “preparing us for college,” but what he doesnt understand is that we want to get there first</p>