Any savvy high school student has known that he or she should take Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate courses if he or she wants to be a competitive applicant to top universities. College admissions are definitely getting more and more competitive, but high school students are getting more and more strategic, even the ones who can't afford to go to the elite prep schools that are essentially breeding grounds for the Ivy League.
And while it's certainly in the student's interest to take as many Honors, Advanced Placement or International Baccalaureate courses as he or she can, it's also important to be reasonable. It's unlikely that any student can handle a full course load of AP courses, especially if he or she wants to participate in the extracurricular activities that admissions committees really like to see (oh and maybe see their friends and have some fun occasionally, too).
Students should think critically about their skill set when choosing which AP courses to take. It's rare to find someone who excels at every single subject to the degree that that he or she can score a 3 or higher on the Advanced Placement test for that subject. (And it must be really hard to like the people who are.) Students should think about what classes they've loved and succeeded in in the past. Does she love to read? Does she recite Othello quotes in her sleep? Then maybe the AP English Language course is a good one to take.
Paul Thomson is a writer and frequent online contributor who is passionate about improving college readiness. He frequently writes about the AP English language and AP Microeconomics. In his spare time, he loves to promote the joy of reading to youth in his community.
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Source: http://paulthomson.articlealley.com/choosing-your-ap-course-ap-english-language-and-ap-microeconomics-2043540.html