<p>Freshman year, I attended high school full-time. Sophomore year, I attended high school half-time and a community college half-time. For junior and senior year (I'm a junior) I'll be attending the community college full-time (minimum 16 hrs/semester). Here are the HS classes that I've taken so far (all Honors/PreAP/GT unless marked otherwise):</p>
<p>9th grade:
Spanish II
AP Computer Science A
Algebra II
English I
Biology
Girls' Golf (fall)
Health (spring, only available as reg. class)
Geography</p>
<p>10th grade:
Spanish III
Precalculus (fall)
English II
Physics
AP World History</p>
<p>However, in addition to these classes, I'll have 80-90 hrs. of college credit, spanning every possible subject. Math will continue through Calc I-III and differential equations; English will continue through Comp I and II, American Lit, and British Lit; Science will cover Chem and Biology; History will include American. I'll have taken Economics, Government, Philosophy, teaching, Public Speaking, and a few fine arts and phys. ed. classes, too. </p>
<p>As for ECs, I was on the golf and Octathlon teams freshman year, I've played guitar for 4 years, and I'm involved in publishing several online tech-related magazines. I plan on actually getting my IT certifications done next summer, too, and I'll be working with either middle- or high-schoolers for the next year-and-a-half with math starting in the spring.</p>
<p>My SAT scores sophomore year were 670 CR, 690 Math, and 730 English, although they're sure to improve since I'll actually be studying for the test this time around (silly sophomore, I was!).</p>
<p>Because I'm in such a strange situation, I've essentially got NO idea what kind of school I'm looking for. I definitely want to study mathematics, but I don't have an idea of what level of school I could actually attend. I'm aware that I haven't got a shot at MIT or anything, but what are some universities with great math programs that I've actually got a chance to attend?</p>