AP Computer Science Principles introduces students to foundational concepts of computer science and challenges them to explore how computing and technology can impact the world. Prerequisites: None. Credits 1.0
Courses offered by AIS Academica
The AP U.S. History course focuses on the development of historical thinking skills (chronological reasoning, comparing and contextualizing, crafting historical arguments using historical evidence, and interpreting and synthesizing historical narrative) and the development of student’s abilities to think conceptually about U.S. history from approximately 1491 to the present.
Students must take the Advanced Placement Exam in order to receive Advanced Placement credit. Students who do not take the AP® Exam will be awarded Honors level credit.
This course is designed to provide college-level instruction on the concepts and tools for working with data.
The AP Spanish Language and Culture course emphasizes communication (understanding and being understood by others) by applying the interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational modes of communication in real-life situations.
AP Psychology is a college-level course providing students an overview of the development of human behaviors and thoughts.
You traveled to the Macro Islands to assist the leader in winning re-election. You came for a job, but you realized as you were working that you loved the islands and wanted to make your home there.
You have been called upon to assist the leader of the Macro Islands who is running for reelection next year. The economy is in shambles, and you need to come up with some feasible solutions.
The AP® Human Geography course is designed to provide college level instruction on the patterns and processes that impact the way humans understand, use, and change Earth’s surface.
The AP French Language and Culture course emphasizes communication (understanding and being understood by others) by applying the interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational modes of communication in real-life situations.
The goal of AP Environmental Science is to provide students with the scientific principles, concepts, and methodologies required to understand the interrelationships of the natural world and to identify and analyze environmental problems that are natural and human-made.
For a year, students participate in an Advanced Placement upscale dining experience in the AP English Literature and Composition course.
This course provides high school students with college-level instruction in studying and writing various kinds of analytic or persuasive essays on literary and nonliterary topics in language, rhetoric, and expository writing.
This course consists of a full high school year of work comparable to calculus courses in colleges and universities.
This course consists of a full high school year of work that is comparable to calculus courses in colleges and universities.
This challenging course is designed to provide a college-level experience and prepare students for the AP exam in early May.
This course is designed to provide college-level instruction in art history and prepare students for the AP exam in early May.