Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has he already had AP Physics 1 or Honors Physcis 1? My STEM-y kids have taken AP Physics 1 alongside Honors Chem sophomore year. AP Physics EM is probably too much for sophomore year alongside (rather than after) BC Calc. AP Physics 1 is commonly a substitute for honors Physics 1 among STEM-y kids.
My kids have also typically taken AP Stats sophomore or junior year along with another (calculus-based) math class. They say AP Stats isn't difficult.
On AB vs BC calc, ask the kid's teacher for advice. In my school, about 1/2 the kids in honors pre-calc take BC and about 1/2 take AB. BC is definitely doable. Note that it means you would need to take something like multivariate senior year (whereas if you take AB, then you take BC senior year). It sounds like your kid is great at math so this is probably fine, but just keep it in mind.
I think OP's child is in 10th. Given that, I would suggest doing AP Calc AB next year, BC, the following year, and then multivariate senior year or AP stats. If student does BC sophmore year, they will potentially max out on courses jr year and need to go to MC for senior year math.
Anonymous wrote:Has he already had AP Physics 1 or Honors Physcis 1? My STEM-y kids have taken AP Physics 1 alongside Honors Chem sophomore year. AP Physics EM is probably too much for sophomore year alongside (rather than after) BC Calc. AP Physics 1 is commonly a substitute for honors Physics 1 among STEM-y kids.
My kids have also typically taken AP Stats sophomore or junior year along with another (calculus-based) math class. They say AP Stats isn't difficult.
On AB vs BC calc, ask the kid's teacher for advice. In my school, about 1/2 the kids in honors pre-calc take BC and about 1/2 take AB. BC is definitely doable. Note that it means you would need to take something like multivariate senior year (whereas if you take AB, then you take BC senior year). It sounds like your kid is great at math so this is probably fine, but just keep it in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has he already had AP Physics 1 or Honors Physcis 1? My STEM-y kids have taken AP Physics 1 alongside Honors Chem sophomore year. AP Physics EM is probably too much for sophomore year alongside (rather than after) BC Calc. AP Physics 1 is commonly a substitute for honors Physics 1 among STEM-y kids.
My kids have also typically taken AP Stats sophomore or junior year along with another (calculus-based) math class. They say AP Stats isn't difficult.
On AB vs BC calc, ask the kid's teacher for advice. In my school, about 1/2 the kids in honors pre-calc take BC and about 1/2 take AB. BC is definitely doable. Note that it means you would need to take something like multivariate senior year (whereas if you take AB, then you take BC senior year). It sounds like your kid is great at math so this is probably fine, but just keep it in mind.
He would be thrilled to take AP Physics next year. I didn't know if doubling up on science classes was reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Has he already had AP Physics 1 or Honors Physcis 1? My STEM-y kids have taken AP Physics 1 alongside Honors Chem sophomore year. AP Physics EM is probably too much for sophomore year alongside (rather than after) BC Calc. AP Physics 1 is commonly a substitute for honors Physics 1 among STEM-y kids.
My kids have also typically taken AP Stats sophomore or junior year along with another (calculus-based) math class. They say AP Stats isn't difficult.
On AB vs BC calc, ask the kid's teacher for advice. In my school, about 1/2 the kids in honors pre-calc take BC and about 1/2 take AB. BC is definitely doable. Note that it means you would need to take something like multivariate senior year (whereas if you take AB, then you take BC senior year). It sounds like your kid is great at math so this is probably fine, but just keep it in mind.
Anonymous wrote:AP Seminar would be hard, but good hard if you are up for supporting it.
H Chem before AP Chem
AP Econ before AP Physics C.
Don't waste Physics C on sophomore year. Strong math preparation is important. Yes, I know your kid is ready for calculus.
Econ is the mathiest Social Science, and he can supplement it with a little calc-based self-study to make economics more interesting and help prepare for physics.
AP Stats would be OK, but the "good" part is already done in that class he already took, for a STEMy kid.
What about AP CS A? (or maybe Principles, but your profile looks like someone who would be miserable in Principles). Or Foundations of Technology? (Or advanced tech courses). Does he have tech credit?
Or more art/music?
Congrats on getting to ASL 3 by grade 10! That's awesome!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:AP computer science is a good suggestion. What does your child want. AP BC is really hard. I'd pick some easier classes.
He's in H. PreCalc now. I thought AP BC was the next course.
Anonymous wrote:AP computer science is a good suggestion. What does your child want. AP BC is really hard. I'd pick some easier classes.