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.
You'll have to ask your school that.
Colleges only award credit to Advanced Placement courses (AP). Pre-AP is generally considered equivalent to "honors" courses. Some high schools may add points to one's GPA but it will probably not get you credit for college. Pre-AP is preparation to take a real AP course. Though you will not get college credit, it would still help you if you took a Pre-AP or honors class. It would help accustom you to the harder work that you will face in college.
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..............
Pre-AP stand for "Pre Advanced Placement." It is meant for students who achieved over 80% in a certain subject in grade 10. It is a level of education (College, University, Pre-AP) in grade 11 for some classes chosen by the school. It is more quickly paced than the University level class, with more subjects covered. It prepares the student for Advanced Placement or AP in Grade 12. Taking the AP course in grade 12 and scoring a grade of at least 80% is like taking the first year of university. It makes the post-secondary school time shorter.
no
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.
Pre-algebra preps you for algebra.2nd answer:Pre-AP-algebra is the same as Algebra I. Both are way harder than pre- algebra.
Yes, you should take both pre-calc and trig before ap calc. Both of those course help lay the fundamentals of ap calc.
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.
Don't take AP in a class you got a B in to ensure an A or B in the AP class. Otherwise, you should go for it.