Spanish Minor

<p>Any input on minoring in a Romance language as well as majoring in something like economics? how difficult would this be?</p>

<p>From what I hear, language minors are the most work because of the number of credit hours one must have. LS&A has a lot of information on it, but from what I know it takes 15 credits for a political science minor, 18 for a physics minor, but like ~24 for a language. So not sure how difficult it is in terms of the classes, but it will definitely take a good chunk of credit hours to complete.</p>

<p>From the website here (<a href="http://www.lsa.umich.edu/saa/minors.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.lsa.umich.edu/saa/minors.html&lt;/a&gt;), it says to get a spanish minor if the student is in LS&A:</p>

<p>18 credits of courses in SPANISH with 9 credits (3 courses) introducing the literature and culture of the Hispanic world at the 300 level, and 9 credits (3 courses) pursuing more in-depth investigation of literary, cultural, or linguistic subjects at the 400 level. All courses included in the minor must be taught in Spanish. However, one course taught in Spanish in another field may be included (usually taken abroad). In addition, one cross-listed course taught bilingually (with a mix of Spanish and English components) may be included. At least 9 of the 18 credits for the Academic Minor must be taken in residence on the Ann Arbor Campus or through a study abroad program affiliated with the University of Michigan.</p>

<p>The reason I thought it was 24 hours is probably because 6 hours (unsure, I'm an engineering student) is at the 100- or 200-level.</p>