AP Spanish Literature.
AP US History.
Honors Algebra II.
Honors American Literature. (This one has dual enrollment, so if I pass a test that I take next semester, I get an AP credit added to my GPA, so I suppose I can consider this class an AP course since it qualifies for it).
Honors Chemistry.
I did in high school for sophomore and junior year.
But my senior year I dual enrolled in community college instead and it was an awesome decision. I got to sleep in every day and do a full years worth of college credit without having to pass a dumb AP exam.
Getting class credits with AP is awesome, but actually having hours and being able to register for classes a day ahead of your classmates >>>>>>>>>
AP Spanish Literature.
AP US History.
Honors Algebra II.
Honors American Literature. (This one has dual enrollment, so if I pass a test that I take next semester, I get an AP credit added to my GPA, so I suppose I can consider this class an AP course since it qualifies for it).
Honors Chemistry.
huh. my school crams American Lit into our AP Language course so I guess we essentially get an AP credit for American Lit too
The International Baccalaureate program. I guess you could say it's a step above AP, and instead of being US-only, we follow worldwide guidelines. We have to submit assignments to Sweden and all that.
I guess you could say it's a step above AP, and instead of being US-only, we follow worldwide guidelines. We have to submit assignments to Sweden and all that.
I googled and this webpage came up explaining that there is no inherent differences in difficulty other than IB being a full-on curriculum of AP classes whereas AP is self-contained in one class only. Is that true though? My school doesn't offer IB and when I asked why, I was told that they were essentially the same thing.