5 APs junior year with cross country — did anyone actually survive this?

by brett_l 46 views4 replies
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brett_lOP
May 25, 2026

I'm signed up for AP Lang, AP Calc BC, AP Bio, APUSH, and AP Spanish this fall and my counselor wants me to drop one. I did 3 APs sophomore year and averaged about 2.5 hours of homework per night, but I also know junior year is a different animal. I'm running cross country in the fall with practices 6 days a week through November, which is what's making me nervous about the September through December stretch specifically.

The schools I'm targeting have average admitted GPA around 3.8 weighted and they want to see rigor in the transcript. But I keep hearing that admissions would rather see a student succeed in 4 APs than struggle in 5, and I genuinely can't tell if that's conventional wisdom or actually how applications get read. My sophomore GPA was 4.1 weighted with 3 APs, so I have some evidence that I can handle load, but 5 feels qualitatively different.

If I drop one it would probably be AP Spanish since I'm already conversationally fluent and the class wouldn't teach me much I don't already know. But it feels like taking the easy path rather than making a strategic choice. I scored 4s on both my AP exams last year so the exams themselves aren't what worry me — it's the sustained daily workload across five classes simultaneously while also trying to stay competitive on the team.

I want to hear from people who've actually been in a version of this situation. Did you manage it or just survive it? And in hindsight, did the extra AP actually matter?

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fatima_y
May 26, 2026

Colleges really do notice second-semester junior grade drops and they matter. A 4.0 in 4 rigorous APs reads better to an admissions reader than a 3.5 in 5 where you clearly ran out of gas in March. The marginal rigor difference between 4 and 5 APs is pretty small at competitive schools.

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fatima_y
May 26, 2026

I did 5 APs junior year with swim and the fall semester was genuinely the hardest stretch of my academic life. I pulled through with As in most classes but I was sleeping 5.5 hours a night from October through January. That sleep deficit hurt my SAT scores in the spring way more than dropping one AP class ever would have.

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amelia_f
May 27, 2026

Dropping AP Spanish when you're already fluent isn't the easy path, it's the rational one. You're not giving up rigor, you're redirecting time to courses where you're actually learning something. Put your Spanish proficiency on the activities section or get a language certification if you want it to show up on the application.

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fatima_y
May 28, 2026

The cross country factor is real in a way that's hard to anticipate. Fall season with travel meets creates these whole days that just disappear, and the physical exhaustion compounds the academic fatigue differently than people expect. November is brutal if you're making postseason. Factor that in before you commit.

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