Lyuokdea said:
The thing I've really learned going to college for my freshman year with a physics major is that as long as you go to a pretty good school, not some community college, as long as the school is up there and has a fairly good reputation, the physics professors will know so much more than you at the undergraduate level, that it won't matter to much where you are, there is always so much to learn at this level, it is at the graduate level where the exact schools and the exact ranking of the faculty really matter, but now, you're so far behind they all look like gods
~Lyuokdea
I agree. One thing I'd like to mention for all high school students is this:
It's great to be interested in physics. But - you need to be flexible about your options. There's a decent chance that you're going to college and find that:
(1) Something else interests you more than physics
or
(2) College-level physics is too difficult and you can't handle it ( I would not let the first term discourage you though)
or
(3) You find that you don't like physics as much as you thought you did as time goes on.
or
some combination of the above
Plus - whatever specialty field of physics you think you're interested in - it may be out of vogue by the time you're a college senior (4 or 5 years from now) and looking at grad schools.
This holds actually for any major, actually. So - it's sometimes just better to pick a good school that offers a well-rounded set of depts rather than a specialty school.
Couple of examples:
1. My best friend from college graduated from a top public high school. Wanted to do math and/or physics, and was good at it in high school. Got C's in math and physics first semester of freshman year. Switched to poly sci (=government). Now has a PhD in poly sci from Berkeley. And doesn't miss math and science at all.
2. One of my brothers started as a premed at Harvard (wanted to be a neurosurgeon back in high school), switched to economics between his first and second year, went on to do investment banking and private equity, and having just finished B-school at Stanford, is now working at a hedge fund.