This really depends on you. No doubt it will be challenging, however many curriculum's do require these courses in one semester. Hopefully you have the appropriate prerequisite coursework. Just make sure you have the study skills. Read the following. If your serious about your studies you should do fine.
Many people feel the hours of study are the most important. However, students can study for hours on end and retain very little. The more appropriate question is, "how can students study more effectively?" Some issues students must consider are as follows.
Thus, it is not so much a question of hard study, but how to study in smart fashion. The bottom line is that the student must take responsibility and ownership over their study habits.
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calculus in the vesicle
English core classes are those that are required, usually to obtain a particular degree. English elective classes are those you can take if you want to.
A semester is half a year.
This varies widely, but your basic credits like English , your Elective, Sociology , and maybe one or two others should transfer if you went to a Federally accredited College or University. Community College or online schooling often does NOT transfer.
This is not a hard schedule, because you get to choose at least a unit in each of the faculties
Arithmetic.
Yes.
There are three courses, six week courses, semester long courses, and SAT prep courses. The six week courses are Algebra I and II, English I, II, III, and IV, Geometry, and Pre-Calculus.
No.
Sir Isaac Newton. He and Leibniz both invented the calculus independently.
there is English, Math, Social Studies, Science, P.E., and one Elective