I’m a high school student with a very challenging course list. Every class I take is honors or Ap (except gym and french were it is not offered). I am taking 2 year advanced math; I took Alg 1in 7th grade, Geometry in 8th, Honors Alg 2 in 9th, Honors Pre Calc in 10th and Ap Calc AB in 11th. I am also in a specialized program with focus on law where I take an internship senior year. I don’t know what to take as my senior year Math, the only courses my school offers at that level are Ap stat or Ap comp sci, and I don’t know if I can handle an Ap Math (which is my weakest subject), along with all my other Ap classes and internship and job and extracurriculars, etc. How harmful would it be to drop Math my senior year? I am not looking to go into the Math or science field in college. I know colleges look for 4 years of math, but compared to my classmates course wise I already took 5 years of high school level math.
AP statistics is generally considered less difficult than AP calculus, though students vary in which is more difficult. But knowledge of statistics is generally useful in any field (particularly social studies subjects, including the most popular major among pre-law students). If AP CS is the principles one, it is also a useful course in terms of content knowledge, due to how computers interact with just about everything.
Be aware that the LSAT has a logic puzzle section and interpreting laws involves logical reasoning, so logical thinking similar to that practiced in math would be a good thing to practice. If you do not like math, college philosophy departments have logic courses.
This is the problem with the advanced math track. I would take stats.