<p>Is this possible? I'd like to do FSH in Dornsife, but at the same time, I'd really like to do business/finance, which seems to be available only in Marshall. </p>
<p>Thanks, CCers.</p>
<p>Is this possible? I'd like to do FSH in Dornsife, but at the same time, I'd really like to do business/finance, which seems to be available only in Marshall. </p>
<p>Thanks, CCers.</p>
<p>Yes, it is possible. Talk to your advisor.</p>
<p>^ OK, awesome. Thanks!</p>
<p>Check out the USC website. Read about the Renaissance Scholars.</p>
<p>Yup, definitely possible!</p>
<p>Hey guys, would it cost a significant amount of extra tuition to double major as opposed to just single major? I may have to call off double majoring if it involves a large tuition fee increase; if it’s just extra textbook and learning materials cost, that’s something I’m okay with. Any objective statistics about the added cost?</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
<p>You’ll pay the same tuition per semester for 12-18 units (students who achieve > 3.75 GPAs may take 20 units without additional costs). Add up the required units for each major plus the GE reqs and language req, etc. and if you can fit them all into 8 semesters, you won’t pay a penny more for 2 majors than for 1. </p>
<p>Each major at USC has a different set number of required classes/units, which makes certain lower-unit majors easier to combine into double majors than those with higher req units. But you can figure that students can skip some requirements (making more room in their schedules for double major units) due to AP or language proficiency. You can get an idea of each majors’ requirements online and lots more info at orientation.</p>
<p>^ Sounds pretty complicated but thanks, madbean.</p>