<p>Ace, these days, you have to take either K201 or X201 to apply to Kelley.</p>
<p>Also, the odds of getting into one of the 300-level math classes as a freshman in the Spring semester are pretty slim. Spring 2013 very few got in:</p>
<p>STAT-K 310 0/116
STAT-S 301 4/100
MATH-K310 3/205
ECON E370 8/495
[Course</a> and Section Enrollment Statistics:<em>Reporting & Security:</em>Office of the Registrar:*Indiana University Bloomington](<a href=“Course and Section Enrollment Statistics: Reporting & Security: Office of the Registrar: Indiana University Bloomington”>Course and Section Enrollment Statistics: Reporting & Security: Office of the Registrar: Indiana University Bloomington)</p>
<p>Of course, a lot of first-year Bloomington students have achieved sophomore status credits and will be listed with the sophomores on the Course and Enrollment lists; but it still seems risky as, if you couldn’t get into one of those classes, you would have to find something else to take to qualify to apply to Kelley.</p>
<p>I would recommend this strategy:</p>
<p>CC classes summer prior to beginning at IUB or AP: Eng W131 and Econ E201</p>
<p>Fall: M119; C104; CSCI A110; plus one easy three-credit class</p>
<p>Spring: K201; BUS-A 100 AND BUS-G 202; plus two easy three-credit classes</p>
<p>Yes, M119 has a low “solid B and higher rate,” but I think this is largely a reflection of the horrible advice that kids take from their advisers that they take M211 just because they do well on the math orientation test. What if all those freshmen (there are hundreds[!!!] of them each Fall semester; 775 out of 962 students who took M211 in Fall 2012 were freshmen) who take M211 instead of M119 settled for taking M119. If they took M119, I think the solid B and higher rate would rise very significantly. For example, one poster here this semester had a high SAT math score and was told to take M211, which he did and got a B- in. It is likely, or close to it, that he would have got a solid B or higher in M119. </p>
<p>M119 is not all that difficult and not nearly as quirky as finite-- stay away from finite. To prepare for M119, take pre-calculus or AP calculus in high school and study calculus like crazy over the summer before starting at IU; download and do and re-do the sample departmental exams and use the other learning materials from this link <a href=“https://resources.oncourse.iu.edu/access/content/group/8f7ba376-1242-4e8a-0048-acbde2ffaad8/StudentResources/[/url]”>https://resources.oncourse.iu.edu/access/content/group/8f7ba376-1242-4e8a-0048-acbde2ffaad8/StudentResources/</a> , and DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES TAKE M211 INSTEAD OF M119, no matter what your adviser tells you!!! If you test out of M119 on the AP, don’t report your score to IU. Take M119 — stay away from M211.</p>
<p>RE this strategy, </p>
<p>–It should be relatively easy, despite where you live in the country (you could find online versions from somewhere, I’m sure), to find local CC or university classes for W131 and Econ E201 that will transfer for credit to IU. </p>
<p>–The classes mentioned would give you a good start on finishing the Icore prerequisites in two years. </p>
<p>–Take Finite AFTER you get accepted to IU, preferably at a CC if you want to protect your IU GPA. CSCI A110 will help you get ready for K201 and is an easy solid B or higher for most people. </p>
<p>–You must have already taken E201 in order to take G202; so, take G202 in spring semester, in order to have plenty of time for your AP score or summer CC transcript for E201 equivalent to get to IU by November, when you will register for Spring classes. </p>
<p>–Take W131 anywhere but IUB and transfer your solid C or higher to IUB for Kelley/IUB credit. The sections are usually taught by graduate students, and less than half the students get a solid B or higher. There is no way to shop for easy-grading professors for W131, since their names are not advertised in the schedule. A lot of them teach it only one year or so and are gone after that anyway.
<a href=“http://cts.admissions.indiana.edu/[/url]”>http://cts.admissions.indiana.edu/</a></p>