Because compared to Spanish, Latin and Ancient Greek are pretty much useless. If he decides to go into law he could even take an entry level course in college. I'm not saying he shouldn't take other classes, as I plan on taking some Roman history classes (something I don't need, but am interested in) and think it makes somebody well rounded. There's a difference between doing that and planning classes with no foresight, however.
Foresight is a shady term. How do you know Latin will be useless? Just because people don't walk around the streets speaking Latin doesn't mean that it's a waste of time. I think that you (he, anyone) should absolutely take a few classes that they aren't initially interested in. That's the whole idea of "getting out of your comfort zone."
For the record, I'm still getting my HSED.
To Newby, my school is so broke they offer TWO AP classes now -- US History and Calc, neither of which I care about right now.
1 credit: ENG 310 -- American Literature
1 credit: ENG 410 -- British Literature
Those build off of one another, why are you taking them concurrently?
I won't. I'll take them in order. There's no "semesters", though. The class finishes when you've done all the work and passed the tests. I could do "three semesters" of English in one year, piece of cake.
Now, let me tell you guys something: Nothing you guys say here is going to stop me from doing this. I was just asking what you guys thought I should take for classes.
EDIT -
Trust, I was thinking about dropping Latin, but I have a reason to learn Ancient Greek.
I'm glad you said you're not interested in Calculus "right now." If you really want to go into Computer Science, you're going to be taking a good amount of math courses beyond it as well as several other courses that are math-related. Computer Science is a mathematical subject; it doesn't matter how you want to look at it. Math is intrinsically involved.
Even if you do, Joe, don't think that this decision is transparent. The Universities and workplace that you apply to (which, by the way, will have an equal or greater amount of bureaucracy) will see that you graduated from an "online high school." You may earn a "real" diploma, but not from what most people will consider a "real" school. I, among everyone else who's posted here, strongly recommend you stay in a real high school.