<p>I'm currently a junior CS major minoring in Business Information Systems(BIS). I only took two classes towards the minor: BIS and Sys Analysis. I'm starting to find while thinking in terms of a business and its criteria can be interesting, it's ultimately not the area I want to work in; basically, I'm doing the minor to develop a business background. This is mainly to learn where computer science ties into the business functions since most if not all computer scientists, engineers, etc. work within a business and perform some function for that business. Overall, I'm finding that the minor is useful in preparing for the job market as the classes deal with leadership and team projects, and these experiences are what employers tend to look for in any technical career including programming. So I feel even though I may be kind of uninterested in the field, I can still take alot from it to prepare me for the job market. I'm looking for most likely a programming job though probably in software engineering, but perhaps mainframe or databases are possibilities too.</p>
<p>But I'm also into math, and to be a computer scientist and qualify for grad school (and some other careers), I'd need more math like Linear Algebra, Probability, maybe Geometry and Abstract Algebra, and Differential Equations. My school only requires Calc 1, Calc 2, and Discrete Structures. Honestly, I'm more into math than information systems, but I feel the BIS minor does serve its purpose, and if I really want a job, the minor could prob help. However, I don't think I have time to take both these minors and graduate on time. I am planning to enroll in grad school sometime after I settle into a career after graduation. </p>
<p>What do you think I should do? Should I take all these programs and postpone my graduation to complete them? Should I drop the BIS minor and instead minor/double-major in Math? Or should I study more math courses after I graduate? I'm currently considering studying more math and other courses necessary after I graduate first and get settled into a career, but the problem I might run into is that I forget what I learned in my math courses here currently, so I'm not sure if that's the best option.</p>
<p>P.S. Sorry for posting this twice. Is there a way to delete one of them?</p>