<p>im taking the APUSH test this year as a junior</p>
<p>next year i plan on taking AP European, AP Stats, AP Government, and AP Economics… my honors physics teacher is trying to get me to take AP physics… but i think that would be a waste cause i dont plan on doing anything with physics</p>
<p>^Calc BC: AB material + differentials, arc length, integration techniques, series, and polar and parametric graphs. Usually, BC is the last few chapters of a single variable calculus textbook or right before the multivariable calculus chapters.</p>
<p>I’m taking the class for all but English Lit., and meeting once a week at lunch with a group of students preparing for that exam (my school doesn’t offer any advanced english classes). I’m impressed at how many exams some people on here are taking–at my school (small/private/rigorous), there are a limited number of AP’s offered, and I believe that I am currently the only one in my school of 330 taking 4 AP classes. The high-score yield rates for the classes are high, however (for example, 94% of all AP Chem students in the past 10 years have received a 4+). </p>
<p>We’ll see how they goes. I’m working on making a study schedule to begin in the next few weeks that will help me gradually prepare, rather than my normal practice of procrastinating/cramming.</p>
<p>Art History
Biology
Calculus AB
Chemistry
Comparative Government
English Language
Macroeconomics
U.S. History</p>
<p>If I had known Human Geography and Psychology are the easiest, I would’ve picked them instead of some of the hardest ones. =[ I don’t know if I should take more than 8.</p>
<p>I guess my school isn’t as rigorous as it could be. The maximum number of AP courses juniors at my school tend to take seems to be 2 (the “standard” is English Language and APUSH). Some may be taking three, but the third would probably be psychology or economics.</p>
<p>I have a feeling I’ll need to self-study a bit for comp sci. I don’t think we’re learning as much as we should.</p>
<p>Biology*
Calculus BC*
Chemistry
Computer Science A*
Macroeconomics*
Microeconomics*
English Language
Environmental Science
U.S. Government & Politics*
Human Geography*
Music Theory*
Physics C both*
Psychology*
Statistics*
U.S. History</p>