<p>Either Tomball or North Harris. Do you live near by too?</p>
<p>Nah, I live off of I-10 and Fry about five miles south. I attended the cyfair campus for a year. North Harris has some of the easiest teachers though. Many of them love to give A’s. The physics class I am taking in July is with a professor who gives 1 A a semester, the one at North Harris gives 50% A’s… Im bout to take the extra time to drive all the way up there if I can walk away with an A and not risk my admittance being revoked because of a GPA drop O_o. That is the only reason why I am not excited about the fall but rather stressed because I have no idea what a “significant” gpa drop is.</p>
<p>I am closest to the North Harris campus, so it will probably be that one. But I was looking online at their catalog and I don’t see anything listed for business calculus, since I just heard I need to follow the sequence I started and continue with bus. calc 2 at a CC.</p>
<p>These are the only colleges that offer business calc 2:</p>
<p>Austin Community College (MATH 1476)
Collin College (MATH 1376)
Dallas County Community College District (MATH 1370).</p>
<p>Oh… crap… I have no idea what to do then…</p>
<p>Take calculus 1 at lonestar in july then take calc 2 next semester at UT. Thats the only thing I can recomend besides somehow finding an apartment soon and moving in so you can goto Austin CC to take it. My friend is in the same situation because he did business calculus like you. What sucks though is that he is in China until the middle of July which gives him no time to take calculus 1. See if you can get them to somehow count the business calculus as a calculus 1 credit.</p>
<p>My son is taking calc 1 online right now through the Lone Star system. I’m not sure which campus he’s technically enrolled through, maybe Cy Fair or Kingwood. The homework is through mathlab and he goes to our local campus (Montgomery) to take the tests. I was little concerned about how the online class would work, but it’s been great.<br>
You might be able to find an online calc class at any Texas CC or University, get it done this summer and transfer it.</p>
<p>Is taking calculus through an online class easy or hard? I don’t think I could “teach myself” if thats what it basically is… but if its an easy grade, i’m up for it… because calculus 1 and business calculus 1 should basically be the same thing… </p>
<p>But you see guys, when I looked at the McComb’s internal transfer requirements on UTDirect, it automatically checks for any indicator classes. It counted my business calculus class as “Course 1 complete”. So my guess is that maybe its counting business cal as calculus one?? See below: </p>
<p>Completion of two of the four indicated courses:
*Calculus I (M 403K, M 408C, or M 308K)
Calculus II (M 403L, M 408D, M 308M)
Microeconomics (ECO 304K)
Macroeconomics (ECO 304L)
*Calculus I is required and must be one of the two courses completed. Course 1: Met M 303K
Course 2: Not Met
Course 3: Not Met
Course 4: Not Met</p>
<p>The prof does have online lecture notes and power point presentations. It certainly would be more like teaching yourself than going to a class several times per week. My son just completed a classroom course in precalc at the community college, so he was probably well prepared for calc.</p>
<p>Maybe you could try to call and speak with one of the McCombs advisors. The worst that they could do is to tell you they only speak with students who are already admitted, but I doubt that they would do that.</p>
<p>I have emailed a McComb’s advisor, i’m just awaiting his response now. I hope its all good news, because I <em>do not</em> want to re-take any calculus classes.</p>
<p>Yeah I would really like to hear about whether business calculus 1 counts as calculus 1. Im on my friend’s UT direct and it says the same thing.</p>
<p>The advisor responded today:</p>
<p>Tina,</p>
<p>We do accept M 303K as Calculus I for the McCombs School of Business undergraduate degree plan. However, UT Austin no longer teaches that sequence (Business Calculus). You can take Business Calculus II (needs to transfer to UT as M 303L) at Austin Community College this summer or fall, and have it count for Calculus II for the McCombs Undergraduate degree plan and meet the Cal II requirement to apply.</p>
<p>Course Transferability: [UT</a> Austin Automated Transfer Equivalency System](<a href=“http://www.utexas.edu/student/admissions/ate/]UT”>http://www.utexas.edu/student/admissions/ate/)</p>
<p>I hope this helps, and should you have any additional questions, please feel free to write. Good luck!</p>
<p>Hook 'em!</p>
<p>So you basically have to go take business calculus 2 at ACC? Can you have business calculus 1 count as M 408K and then take calculus 2 (M 408L) at UT?</p>
<p>ampzor, no you cannot count business calculus 1 as M 408K. if you take business calculus 1, then you have to take business calculus 2 for it to count as 2 calculus classes. idk what your major is but i am talking about business major. i was in the same situation and the adviser i talked to a while back told me that you would have to take M 408K then take M 408L sequence.</p>
<p>Thanks for the clarification. I am an engineering major but, my friend is a business major and I am trying to get a few of his questions cleared up. Hes in China until the middle of July so I am trying to do his research for him.</p>
<p>so is your friend already in mccombs or is he trying to transfer internally/externally?</p>
<p>Does anyone know what government I would have to take? I’ve taken U.S. government at UT Arlington, and to my understanding I have to take GOV 3 TX at UT, but lo and behold… the class isn’t in the class schedule.</p>
<p>You can take ACC classes while at UT. Register for 12 UT hours in the fall and take the 3 extra hours at ACC Rio Grande Campus (~10 blocks from campus) or online through ACC.</p>