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Shadow in Spanish is 'sombra.' It was one of our recent vocab words in my Spanish AP class. :-)
It depends what ap class you are taking. I mean some are challenging and others don't have you do any work. It just depends. Ap classes are not hard you just have to put in the time and work hard in order to pass. If you do your homework and do anything you can to understand the material you can easily pass the class and pass the ap test. I know this because I am in a ap euro class and at first it was challenging. I was doing so bad that my teacher even told me that he thought it would be better for me to transfer to a regular class than to stay in his. However I told him no and I did all my homework and even went into tutoring for some extra help in understand the material i was reading about. So now I am passing the class with a B.
Not if you work hard. Just keep up with what you have to keep up with. It's really easy.
If you pass an AP class but fail the AP exam you will NOT get a college credit but you will receive credit for the class. Colleges will still recognize that you took an AP class, and you will still receive credit for the class, just not college credit.
go to ap online..............
Never skip taking the class, you learn valuable lessons that can help making taking that particular test easier and other AP exams easier. As a sophomore you have options so don't over do it with the AP classes and try to enjoy yourself colleges won't look down on taking one less AP. Also they care more about the AP class grade than they do the AP test.
NOT REALLY. The issue is simply that if you do not take the AP Spanish exam and get an acceptable score (usually a 4 or 5), you will not get university credits for a Spanish course of equivalent difficulty as an AP Spanish Course. If we use Georgetown University as an example, if you get a 4 on the AP Spanish exam, you will get three credits for SPAN 101 or Advanced Spanish I. This can accelerate graduation or provide more opportunities to take electives by counting for core or major/minor requirements.However, if you do not have the AP score, but wish to continue with Spanish at the university level, you can take a Spanish language test given by the university which will assess which Spanish course is appropriate for you to join based on skill level and knowledge base.Whether or not you will be required to take Spanish (or some other foreign language) depends again on the school in question. Most Liberal Arts Universities in the United States require proficiency in one foreign language to graduate, but (1) will not require it to be in the same language you studied in high school -- even though that will likely be easier because you already have a baseline -- and (2) will not require coursework if you can demonstrate proficiency according to the school's standards. Most Engineering and Nursing Tracks do not require proficiency in a foreign language.
No, it's Literature. At least that's what it is at most schools, check if yours is different.
This is not a hard schedule, because you get to choose at least a unit in each of the faculties
It's spelled sophomore by the way. Here's a list of possible AP classes you can take: AP Biology AP World History AP Human Geography AP Foreign Language (level 5 &6 if you decide to go that far) **Foreign language AP classes can only be taken if you've completed levels 1-4 of the language first.**
Most colleges require a language of some kind in your high school curriculum and if you don't do it there, you have to finish in college.. I think you should do whatever you like. AP will be more challenging but if you pass the AP test at the end ( and if the college accepts this program) you can start college already having credits. It is much cheaper than doing so in college. Also, if you decide to, you can have a jump start if you want Spanish for a minor. Don't let people discourage you from taking the class you want just because its not a must have. People don't HAVE to take art or music classes either, but they do because they enjoy them!Buena Suerte!
You'll have to ask your school that.