<p>What math courses are there to take after BC? I am not going to take stat.</p>
<p>Probably nothing in high school, but the next course would be Multivariable Calculus which you can most likely take at a local college.</p>
<p>Multivariable Calculus (sometimes called Calculus III or Advanced Calculus)
Differential Equations
Linear Algebra</p>
<p>That's all I know of...you'll know more after you take these courses.</p>
<p>Yeah, next fall is gonna be really stressful, so I'm taking Stat next year, and maybe going to a Community College in the Spring?
The only thing I'm wondering is, if you take a college course during the fall (like Multivariable calculus), it would strengthen your college application, right? If you take it in the spring, then your college admission is already over ...</p>
<p>Some people take Stats, but I personally think its not a very useful/fun/overall good class...</p>
<p>Multivariable Calc (Actually much easier than Calc I). You get to learn the other 4 huge theorems of Calculus (Line Int, Green's, Stokes', Div), and when you know all 5, it feels pretty good. Its a really fun class... take it. Oh and on the last day of class, the teacher shows you the Generalized Stokes' Theorem (Encompassing all 5) and you feel like your life (or just Calc life) is complete.</p>
<p>Ah...</p>
<p>:)</p>
<p>Haha HiWei. I took multi this past year and learned about Stokes' in Physics C. Maybe that is because I took multi for a semester and differential equations for a semester. </p>
<p>Both classes are great. Anything after BC is pretty damn cool. Have fun next year seniors in the beyond-BC world.</p>
<p>I'm currently taking Advanced Calculus (Multivariable Calculus). Funnn..</p>
<p>You could take Graph Theory/Networks or Numerical Analysis... those are pretty cool classes.</p>
<p>besides community college, where else can i take these courses? I don't want to spend a couple of hundred dollars on a course that prob wont even give credit</p>
<p>Um, I think if you do it while you're still in high school, you dont have to pay for anything (like PSEO). If you want credits that are more transferable, try a bigger university like, for me, University of Minnesota istead of a local college.</p>
<p>You don't have to pay for anything??? You sure about that?</p>
<p>Well for PSEO, the State pays for tuition, costs, books and other stuff except for meals and transportation. I'm not sure if its the same in your case, but it should be... I think...</p>
<p>:)</p>
<p>sophomore year I took ap stat, this year i took ap calc bc, and next year i'm going to take multivariable calc.</p>
<p>I think I'm taking BC first semester next year and then Multi. Just a note on the college courses-I think technically the school should pay for it but right now I'm fighting my school to pay for some online courses. GRRRR.... I think it probably depends on which state you're in.</p>
<p>what is calculus II? = Calc BC??
i thought it went Pre Calc// Calc AB// Calc BC (just finished)// Calc II// Differnetial eq's</p>
<p>Calculus AB = Calculus I (differential)
Calculus BC = Calculus I (differential) and II (integral)
Calculus III = multivariable
After that, you could take Differential Equations or Linear Algebra.</p>