Sure, if you want to work at music seriously. But you need to decide what your goals are. There are all sorts of places to study music after high school. College is just one of them. Talk to your guidance counselor or the music teacher in school.
a sophomore in high school and Jackson gonna be a freshman in college
no he is home schooled, but he has a 4.0 GPA. Although he wants to go to college he is supposed to be a sophomore in high school.
A 10th grader is called a sophomore.
next school year (2008-2009) he will be a sophomore. but he is home-schooled anyways..
Taylor Swift attended Aaron Academy after her Sophomore year in High School. She received her High School diploma in 2008.
When it is the second year of High school or College
Sophomore
A sophomore, in America is someone in their second year of either high school or college. A sophomore is a second-year student. It can be used for high school or college. Sophomore can also be used to refer to someone in their second year of anything, but primarily it refers to an educational institution. In the references below is the definition. Typically at a college or university, a student is classified as a sophomore once he/she has completed their 29th credit. A sophmore is a student in 10th grade
no
Neither, he dropped out of high school when he was a sophomore
The word 'sophomore' is both a noun and an adjective.The noun sophomore is a word for a person in their second year of high school or college; a person or group in their second year of an endeavor.The adjective sophomore is a word to describe a noun as of or pertaining to a sophomore; of or being a second effort or second version.
In actual fact, Taylor didn't go to college at all. He dropped out of high school when he was a Sophomore.
In naming high school and college classes, the names are, in order from youngest to oldest:FreshmanSophomoreJuniorSenior
i am and I'm a sophomore.
As long as your parents are abcent of you
it all depends on one thing. how much you like him/her if people have a problem with it. tell them to build a bridge, and get over it
No, not yet. He is only 16 years old, so he's only a sophomore or junior in high school. No, not yet. He is only 16 years old, so he's only a sophomore or junior in high school.