Minor in Economics

<p>Anybody know if this would be enough to get a minor in economics. The bulletin is hard to understand. </p>

<p>M119 Calculus
E201 Intro Microeconomics
E202 Intro Macroeconomics
E321 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory
E322 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory
E370 Statistical Analysis for Business and Economics</p>

<p>Yes, it looks like the bulletin has a misprint, and that you only need 15 units (and that E370 can’t count among the 15 units). Based upon this, the list of courses you gave will suffice (and E370 isn’t even needed–although you will need it if you are a business major).</p>

<p>I’d contact an advisor in the Economics department just to verify this.</p>

<p>Yeah, I think it is right too. Thanks for your help.</p>

<p>What is interesting about what you bring up here is that this means that anyone who majors in business can get an economics minor simply by taking two extra courses (E321 and one other 300 or 400 level course) in addition to the three already required economic courses and the two required math courses (calculus and finite math).</p>

<p>I would expect that if more business majors knew this, then the E321 courses would be packed wth business people in addition to econ majors.</p>

<p>I think a lot might know about it, but the grading is really hard for E321 and E322. The average for all sections of E321 last fall was 2.25 with 25% of the class withdrawing from it. Business honors students at Kelley graduate with 3.7 or 3.8 on average, so I doubt many of them do the econ minor. One of the E321 sections last fall had 74 students and only 8 of them got a B or higher.</p>

<p>Woohoo I got an “A” on my E321 class last semester. I had Professor Fu Ranq Chang and would highly reccommend him. He is very intelligent (got PhD’s in Mathematics and Economics from the University of Chicago).</p>

<p>Wow, that’s the section I was quoting. You got the only A; one person got an A+. Great work!</p>