<p>ibSleepy- We have four classes a day, 1.5 hours long each. It gets really boring.</p>
<p>aStyle- For Calc thing, yes that is true but at our school they require both in the same year. It’s kinda weird. And about the Spanish, I don’t get how that would be redundant. We have to take a certain level of Spanish before we can move on to the next; I am merely taking two levels in one year so I can get to Spanish 4 and then AP Spanish during junior and senior year.</p>
<p>Also AP Euro and Honors English 11 are blocked together. And some of my friends in AP Euro said that they have a crazy amount of homework for it.</p>
<p>Only four weighted classes is not challenging at all for sophomore year. Your workload will not be too much (I guess it depends on the school though).</p>
<p>Where does P.E. come in then? And that looks like a pretty tough schedule, but I’d probably have a class schedule of around the same difficulty, and with the same kind of 4 classes/semester had I not moved a couple years ago. My school here has block days, 1 AP class, and the IB program, which is much more restrictive.</p>
<p>I think its better to go well in a less number of hard classes than do bad in a large amount… looking at your work load you will have to sacrifice extracurriculars and you won’t be able to fit in studying for all those tests and AP tests if they land on the same dates or close. If I were you I would spread some of those out to your junior year/senior year. Whats the point when you can take then in junior year and senior?</p>
<p>@Gord0nFreeman: At a high school near me the math goes like this:</p>
<p>Advanced Math Analysis -> AP Analytical Calculus (BC but they go over more advanced stuff not covered on the test) -> Linear Algebra and Ordinary Differential Equations -> Topics in Advanced Mathematics</p>