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California generally requires a minimum of 13 high school credits to graduate, while Arizona requires a minimum of 22. However, the specific requirements for graduation may vary between individual schools and districts in each state. It's important to check with the specific high school or school district to determine the exact credit requirements for graduation.
Each school requires a different amount of credits to become a high school sophomore. The average is around 25 or 26 credits.
Freshman - fewer than 30 credits Sophomore - 30 to 59 credits Junior - 60 to 89 credits Senior - 90 credits and above
Each class is given units and those are credits. If you fail a class you don't get the credit for the class and have to repeat it.
If you mean credits, you have to look at your class load and the number of credits for each class.
STUDENT CLASSIFICATION A student's year (freshman, sophomore, junior, senior) is based on the number of earned credit hours. Students with 27 or fewer credits earned toward the degree will be classified as freshmen; those with 28 to 59 credits will be classified as sophomores; those with 60 to 89 credits will be classified as juniors; and those with 90 or more credits will be classified as seniors. The above is an approximate number of credits particular to each classification. It really depends on the college or university. Still, the number would be very close. Remember the above is based on a college or university that operates of a regular two semester academic year. Those that operate on a tri-semester or quarter-semester would be quite different.
The national average class-load at the collegiate level for a single semester is from 12-15 credits. This equates to 4+ courses, depending on the credits for each course.
Depends on the class. Each class is a number of units and the units translates into the hours in class. For instance if you have a 3 unit class you spend 3 hours a week in that class.
Approximately 27 credits. Each credit is 16 hours of class contact per semester.
It depends on how many courses you are willing to finish per semester and how many credits each course is worth. Different courses give you different amounts of credit depending on how hard or how long they are. You could probably easily manage one class per semester, for example, but whether that is a one credit class or more would depend on what the class is. Check out your college website to see how many credits each class you want to take counts for, then divide 39 by that number to see how many semesters it will take to get to 39 credits.
In california you get 5.00 credits each subject and here we have 6 classes so 30 all together and theres two years of middle school so overall u need 60.00 credits to graduate or pass middle school. If you dont have enough then i suggest you attend summer school.
200. each semester of a class is 5 credits (5 classes X 8 semesters X 5 credits per semester.)