<p>Not sure if this happened to anyone else but at orientation/advising I was told to search for classes using "student version." Just realized this is not real time. When I used "class search" I found new sections that had been added for courses that I thought were closed. </p>
<p>Hope this makes sense</p>
<p>You can go to this link and click on “Schedule of Classes” near the top of the page and get a real time schedule. </p>
<p>[IUPUI</a> Registrar - Course Offerings](<a href=“http://registrar.iupui.edu/schedule.html]IUPUI”>http://registrar.iupui.edu/schedule.html)</p>
<p>sorry, yankees, but people introduced bthomp1. Hope bthomp1 are still around to answer my questions:</p>
<p>Math-M119, BUS-K201 Fall semester
BUS-C104 and Math-M118 Spring</p>
<p>will these 4 courses be enough to meet the admission requirement from UD ? of course, we will choose some “easier” courses to get total 26 credits. thank you</p>
<p>Applepear, I think that taking K201 and X201 instead of finite and calculus might be an easier way to get you four Kelley prerequites. This is because of the higher rates of students passing these classes with a B or higher, and you need all B’s or higher to get into Kelley the guaranteed route.</p>
<p>Last fall semester, 49% (993/2019) of the students who took K201 got a solid B or higher; in Spring, 67% (415/616) got a solid B or higher in X201.</p>
<p>Compare that to M119 and M118 last fall and spring:
M118 fall – 1635/4100 40%
M118 spring – 524/2039 26%
M119 fall – 513/1982 26%
M119 Spring – 338/1313 26%</p>
<p>So, just based on these percentages, you might consider</p>
<p>Fall
K201
M118 or M119</p>
<p>Spring
C104
X201</p>
<p>Of course, your student may be good at math and bad at computer or vice versa. These are just the percentages and what looks like the less difficult path to getting the four Kelley courses. Finite and calculus are both very difficult at IUB. I think the finite Fall Semester pass rate is relatively high (40%) because a lot of Kelley direct admits take it and do well in it that semester, especially the ones who can’t get M118 credit from community colleges in their state to transfer credit for the course to IUB. The spring semester, however, the solid B rate for M118 drops to 26%, the same as M119 both semesters last year. I doubt many direct admits take M119 in Fall semesters (and not at all if they come in with calculus credit, as many do) as they want to get finite out of the way and do not want to do finite and calculus in the same semester. I personally think that if you are good at math, calculus would be easier than finite. My son was a direct admit and took finite, which has very quirky content to a lot of people. He had to drop finite at IUB and took it at Ivy Tech, but in calculus at IUB he got an A.</p>
<p>You can learn what finite is like at IUB by watching videos of “The Finite Show” at this link:
<a href=“http://www.imds.iupui.edu/imds/bb.shtml[/url]”>http://www.imds.iupui.edu/imds/bb.shtml</a></p>
<p>Hope this helps.</p>
<p>wa, this is great help. thanks a lot, bthomp. then C104 will be moved to spring because somebody said that he is not a big fan to take C104 and K201 at the same semester. both of them are heavy load.</p>
<p>also it has been mentioned that:</p>
<p>it seems to me that I’ve read here many times that accounting is a Kelley requirement for admission. </p>
<p>Could anybody confirm this ? thanks a lot</p>
<p>bthomp, is it a good idea to choose the schedule:</p>
<p>Fall
K201
C104</p>
<p>Spring
M118 or M119
X201</p>
<p>Yeah, that schedule looks good. </p>
<p>You don’t need A100 to be accepted into Kelley. Just make sure to get all solid B and above. If you got, say, a B- in K201 first semester, you might want to take A100 second semester and get a good grade to try and make up for the B-. But you don’t need A100 as long as you stay on course for all solid B’s.</p>
<p>Not taking A100 freshman year put you behind schedule to take Icore in Fall of junior year. So you might want to look into taking A201 in the summer and transferring the credit to IUB. You will be in Kelley already, so you would only need a solid C or above in it for it to count as an Icore prerequisite. Then you could take A100 in the fall and A202 in the spring at IUB. Since you are taking only four Icore prerequisites freshman year at IUB, you might want to take some Icore prerequisites in summers at community college or local college in order to get all of them done before fall of junior year (maybe T175 1.5 credit Kelley Icore prereq freshman year, which grades easily). What is your major? You need to have completed Icore to take a lot of upper level classes for most majors. </p>
<p>You can use the Credit Transfer Service to find Icore prerequisite classes in your area that will transfer to IUB. Classes that often transfer are both intro accountings, micro and macroeconomics, business law, English composition, finite, calculus. That is half of the Icore prerequisites. Of course you need to take some of them at IUB freshman year in order to be able to apply to Kelley.
[Credit</a> Transfer Service: Admissions: Indiana University](<a href=“http://cts.admissions.indiana.edu/]Credit”>http://cts.admissions.indiana.edu/)</p>
<p><a href=“Indiana University Bloomington”>Indiana University Bloomington;
<p>thanks, bthomp,son is interested in Finance. Now I am bit concerned if he can finish Icore prerequisite on time. normally when should he finish all of them ? After sophormore ?</p>
<p>Most people take Icore fall of junior year. For finance, it is a good idea to take it that semester, as Icore is a prerequisite for almost all of the upper-level finance classes (G345 can be taken for finance major credit before taking Icore, but microecon is a prerequisite). </p>
<p>As far as wondering if their is time to complete all the Icore prerequisites, you have a list of all the required classes in the bulletin and that list won’t change. You can plan out all the courses and when and where they should be taken. If you do only four or five Icore prerequisites in freshman year in Bloomington, then you will probably need community college credit from summer school, especially if A100 is not taken freshman year, as A100, A201, and A202 need to be completed in three different semesters if you take them on the Bloomington campus. I know kids that have taken A201 and A202 at cc in the same summer and transferred it to IUB. Microeconomics is a good one to take before getting to IUB, as it is a prerequisite for G202 and also tough grading at IUB. But you need to plan the whole schedule, which can be done with all the IUB online resources and info from your community college. Some states this is hard to do; like California, which doesn’t even offer summer community college anymore at many schools because of the budget cuts.</p>
<p>this is great, I can’t believe getting your answer Friday night. Thanks so…much, I will ask son to check it out.</p>