You may be able to take AP Biology as an elective if you've already completed your science credit requirements. However, there is no way to get around graduation requirements - nearly all schools require an art credit, for various reasons. They aim to let students express themselves (like it or not).
An art credit won't exactly help you in college, except to spice up your résumé is you're looking for a career in art. The same goes for all electives, though.
At 19 Amelia went to college in Philadelphia. She did not stay and graduate though. Instead at 20 years old Amelia moved to Toronto to join the war effort
Amelia Earhart attended junior college at the Ogontz School for Girls (now Penn State Abington) but did not graduate. A year after leaving she planned on enrolling at Smith College but instead chose Columbia University. She left the program after one year.
Gustave Courbet
She studied Medicine at Columbia University, in 1919, and then re-enrolled in 1924, but both times was forced to quit because of family financial situation. Because of the same reason she was forced to abandon her dream about MIT.
No. Instead it is a noun. A proper adjective would be a word that describes something, but it is also a name of a place or style, etc.for example: I like French fries. I like Chinesefood.
no you cannot you must go to college and get a batchelors degree or someother advanced degree you must excel in biology chemistry and mathematics.
At 19 Amelia went to college in Philadelphia. She did not stay and graduate though. Instead at 20 years old Amelia moved to Toronto to join the war effort
Amelia Earhart attended junior college at the Ogontz School for Girls (now Penn State Abington) but did not graduate. A year after leaving she planned on enrolling at Smith College but instead chose Columbia University. She left the program after one year.
Alex Rodriguez, even though being recruited by the University of Miami to be their quarterback, did not attend college. Instead he signed with the Seattle Mariners to begin his professional baseball career.
A PhD, Doctorate of Philosophy, will usually take you about 8 years. It takes roughly 4 years to obtain a Bachelors Degree, then you go to Graduate School to obtain a PhD. Medical Doctors have a very similar path, instead of Graduate School, they go to Medical School or something like it, and can end up with either a M.D. (Medical Doctorate) or a D.O. (Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine)
Certify or be commissioned, or to calibrate.
The term "emancipation" usually refers to someone under the age of 18 wanting to legally be in control of their own life. Maybe they want to move out of their parent's house, or maybe their parents have died and they don't want to move in with a foster family. A college graduate would be over the age of 18. A younger college student might want to get emancipated so that he/she can pay in-state tuition where the college is instead of paying out-of-state tuition where the parent's live.
Probably. It depends on your specific school. You should ask your guidance counselor questions like this. At my high school, only one science course was required in order to graduate. There was a slight stigma associated with the "General Science" class (it was usually referred to as "science for dummies"), so most people who didn't want to take more than one science class but also didn't want to take "General Science" took Biology instead. They could alternatively have taken Physics or Chemistry, but these were widely regarded as being more difficult.
Take that half credit in a summer school session perhaps and graduate mid-term instead.
No
No, college has 400m hurdles instead
Accredited distance learning is like online colleges. The difference is that instead of a college degree you could get a certificate or something for a single course.