<p>So, can anyone tell me a list of "useful" APs?</p>
<p>Like I know Psychology is taken just for the AP number counts.. BUt I would like to know AP credits that most university accepts.</p>
<p>Yeah.. Sorry if it sounds a bit harsh.. I don't know how else to put it</p>
<p>You can find out what AP credits a university accepts by checking its site.</p>
<p>It’s hard to make a list of APs that “most colleges accept”, but, here goes:</p>
<p>Biology
Calculus AB/BC (BC more so than AB)
Chemistry
English Language
English Literature
Spanish Language (less than average)
Spanish Literature
German Language (less than average)
French Language (less than average)
Chinese Language (less than average)
Physics B/C: E&M / M</p>
<p>Less common ones include:</p>
<p>European History
World History
World History
Art History
US Government
Comparative Government
Latin: Vergil (not sure about this one)</p>
<p>Rare ones include:</p>
<p>Computer Science A
Macroeconomics
Microeconomics
Environmental Science
Human Geography
Music Theory
Psychology
Statistics
Studio Art</p>
<p>Just my thoughts/guesses.</p>
<p>
I bet that many, if not most, students who take AP Psychology would disagree with this statement.</p>
<p>^ Kind of like me. I’m taking Psych because I’ll need it.</p>
<p>Okay I’m sorry! Really! I didn’t mean it to sound bad or anything ):</p>
<p>But I just don’t wanna take 20 APs and the college(s) I would like to go to don’t accept like 15 of them D:</p>
<p>Every college has a page where they explain in detail which AP Tests would give you college credit, which AP Tests would place you in an upper-level class and which AP Tests colleges don’t accept. In my opinion, it’s uncommon for competive schools to accept AP Art History, AP Music Theory, or AP Enviromental Science.</p>
<p>On each college’s college board profile, there’s a link for their AP policy under the AP/SAT tab</p>
<p>Yeah… Except I just want a general idea. I don’t want to complete all of the AP’s accepted in that one college and then I get rejected from that college…</p>