Death?

<p>Would dual majoring in political science, economics at wharton, with a concentration in finance, and minoring in psychology be too difficult?</p>

<p>poli sci isn’t in Wharton. It’s in the College. You would have to dual degree and then double major in econ and polisci in the College while concentrating in finance and minoring in psychology. </p>

<p>I wouldn’t say it’s difficult, but it’ll probably take you more than 4 years to fulfill all the reqs.</p>

<p>It shouldn’t take more than four years. I know several people who started in the College and added a second degree from Wharton (and vice-versa), and none of them had any trouble graduating in four years. They didn’t take summer courses or have crazy schedules either. If you plan your courses well, it wouldn’t be a problem for you.</p>

<p>Chrisw, the OP wants to double major in PSCI and Econ while dual degreeing in Finance and minoring in Psych. You don’t think it’ll take more than 4 years?</p>

<p>Unless he meant psci in the college and one wharton econ degree with a minor in psych.</p>

<p>He said Economics at Wharton … which would appear to be a dual degree, political science and finance with a minor in Psych. Half of the courses for the PSYC minor can probably be double counted with the polisci major, and a few courses could overlap between PSCI and the Wharton curriculum if you really try. Dual degree with a major from each school and a minor is no problem in four years as long as you are motivated from the start!</p>

<p>So, now comes another question. How about triple majoring in Psych, Econ (from wharton with a concentration in finance), and Poli Sci (concentrating in International Relations)?</p>

<p>Yeah that’s not smart. If you’re in the College already, you could accomplish something similar with a concentration in behavioral economics and a political science degree (you’d probably want to concentrate in something other than political economy).</p>

<p>For what it’s worth, the number of majors and degrees you have doesn’t help your job chances. An employer would rather see you do well in one subject than average in three. It’s tempting to be overly ambitious, but if I were you, I’d learn to walk before I run - get acclimated to college life before thinking about dual degreeing with two majors from the College</p>