<p>Crime on Stanford is very low compared to most other college campuses, so that makes bike theft one of the more prominent crimes here (percentage-wise). I don't think it's a huge issue.</p>
<p>If you're taking AP exams, I suggest looking up Stanford's AP policy and only studying for the ones you can get credit for. The rest don't matter at all. Stanford has been getting stingier with AP credit, phasing out AP exams the last few years. You guys can only get credit for Calculus (AB or BC), science (Chemistry, Physics B, Physics C, CS A, CS AB), Economics (Micro or Macro), and foreign language (Spanish, French, or German).</p>
<p>Wow. So, basically there's no point in me taking the AP Stats test. Or really even the class, hehe. Well, less stress in May, and more time to study French and Physics, since those actually count.</p>
<p>A score of 5 in AP French Language will give you 10 quarter units of credit and place you into French 22 (2nd year French), or higher by placement exam. If you don't get a 5, you can still place into a higher class by taking the placement exam at the beginning of the Autumn Quarter.</p>
<p>The current foreign language requirement can be satisfied by taking one year of a language or scoring 4 or 5 on AP French, German, Latin, or Spanish, or scoring high enough on the SAT II.</p>
<p>A score of 5 on either Calculus AB or BC gives you credit for Math 41 and 42.</p>
<p>The Stanford Bulletin says that IB credit is given for exams that correspond to the allowed AP exams, with 6,7 HL = 4,5 AP. For more information, you should contact the External Credit Evaluation section of the Office of the Registrar.</p>