<p>Oh that’s different. In FL all of our dual enrollment classes are free, but in your case I would take a class over the summer just to show colleges you’re doing something productive! And you could get easy classes out of the way, at a significantly cheaper price than at a big university.</p>
<p>Keep in mind that many colleges, especially private colleges, don’t allow dual-enrollment courses to transfer if they were used to meet a high school graduation requirement.</p>
<p>Tigerman, then go for it! I’m sure it’s more fun than a regular high school class.</p>
<p>Yeah, I will. Thanks for all the info. My school does allow it for graduation. I doubt algebra 2 and Intro to Business are too hard and I hope it does look good on a college application. Of you guys know, does the community college give a certificate or transcript for the courses I complete? Also, will these classes be even harder during the summer?
Thanks again</p>
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<p>Yes, and the grades will become part of your permanent college transcript.</p>
<p>Why not just double up on AP Stats and precalc junior year? Thats what most kids at my school do.</p>
<p>Opinion: Test out with your school district for math courses if you can as there are plenty of online resources etc about to get through them. Or you can also go take the AP Calc BC exam and you’ll have access to the higher mathematics at a community college.</p>
<p>–You’re going to want the big (college) graduation requirements that you can get out of community college such as a college sophomore year English course if you pass AP English Language and whatever you can pick up at the community college! ->Because when you enter college you’ll have all these annoying courses in the way that may prevent you from taking courses you want in your major.</p>
<p>@Patton370 I can’t as I am planning to take AP Bio</p>
<p>@tangentline Our district does not let us test out math classes. I don’t why but it sucks. Also, I am not sure if the community college offers sophomore English or not</p>