no
In a typical day, a college professor teaches a few different classes. He or she then takes time out to grade papers, come up with a curriculum, and deals with any inquiries from his or her students.
Advanced Placement, or AP classes are high school classes that can qualify for college credit at most accredited American universities. The credit received depends on the policy of the accepting university, the grade received, and the grade received on a standardized test taken at the completion of the class. Pre-AP classes are advanced cirriculum middle school classes designed to prepare the students for the AP classes in high school.
Advanced Placement, or AP classes are high school classes that can qualify for college credit at most accredited American universities. The credit received depends on the policy of the accepting university, the grade received, and the grade received on a standardized test taken at the completion of the class. Pre-AP classes are advanced cirriculum middle school classes designed to prepare the students for the AP classes in high school.
Advanced Placement, or AP classes are high school classes that can qualify for college credit at most accredited American universities. The credit received depends on the policy of the accepting university, the grade received, and the grade received on a standardized test taken at the completion of the class. Pre-AP classes are advanced cirriculum middle school classes designed to prepare the students for the AP classes in high school.
ACT
An AP (Advanced Placement) is the equivalent of a college level class. They move at a faster pace and cover more material and are more in-depth than regular high school classes. Many use a higher grade point scale (5.0 or 6.0 rather than a 4.0) and most colleges accept them for college credit.
Graduating early from high school to go on to college may require taking on extra course loads for some students. However, some teenagers might have difficulty keeping up with classes at their current grade level, while simultaneously taking on tougher classes at a higher grade level. Alternatively, students and parents might consider online high schools. This distance-learning platform affords students the opportunity to take on extra classes from the comfort of home at their own pace.
In Middle School you can pick 1 or 2 electives same as high school. And in college you pick your own classes.
11-12th or out of hight school in college
It is possible to get into college with a D letter grade, however, you may have to take remedial classes that won't count towards college credit. Local colleges will probably offer more leeway.
One can "audit" a course without getting a grade. You must attend classes and do the assignments with no consequences of any grade.
That depends on the state you live in. In some states, sixth grade can be taught with either an Elementary Education degree (usually good for K-8th grade) or by a Secondary Education degree (6th grade-12th grade). Elementary Education majors need to take the same basic math classes all other college students take plus a "math for Elementary School teachers" type class. In most states, to get Secondary Education certification you need to get a major in a subject matter, then take extra classes to learn to teach. So you'd need to get a BS in Math, which involves LOTS of math classes starting with Calculus and going up from there, including theory classes.