Transferring to UT?

<p>I think that you just have to have completed third semester college calculus (Multivariate) before you can take anything beyone Micro and Macro.</p>

<p>okay, so would it be possible for me to transfer successfully with my current hours in GPA and hours into the liberal arts program and then take the calculus sequence?
My college requires me to take about 3 different math classes before I can take a single calculus class, but this would invariably delay my transfer.</p>

<p>^I'd talk to your school about possibly bypassing a class or two. I know at the CC I used to go to, you could bypass Pre-Cal and go on to Calculus if you received an A in Trigonometry. Or you could always try to place into a higher level math class.</p>

<p>I talked to them today and they said I have to take the whole sequence leading up to calculus, Im thinking of waiting till UT and taking it there</p>

<p>Assuming you've already had micro and macro or have AP credit for them, I think no calculus before UT would mean that your first year at UT you'd be taking the three semester calc (408 K L M) in two semesters (408 C and D) and not yet taking any of the classes in your major, the econ classes beyond macro and micro that require multivariate calc as a prerequisite. Graduation delay. </p>

<p>Can you take more college math some other way so you have more math out of the way before you come to UT?</p>

<p>Actually, the OP could still take some economics classes without having taken Calculus. Below are a few classes that s/he could take. Main problem is that the OP only needs 1 Upper Level Economics Elective class (where Calculus is not a Pre-Req)</p>

<p>ECO</a> 350K - Fall 2007</p>

<p>ECO</a> 350K - Spring 2007</p>

<p>I need to have another ECON class besides micro and macro to transfer?</p>

<p>Don't know - I wouldn't think so but ask Admissions - I was just worried about you being able to register for econ classes once you got to Texas and wanted to start taking classes in your major.</p>

<p>thank you everyone</p>

<p>Hey cartmanclone, I also go to a DCC school and am trying to transfer to UT. Did you take your classes that are listed on the Transfer Guide or did you take the 48 hour core curriculum? Right now I'm taking the core because it transfers to UT's core and am wondering if that makes much of a differnece.</p>

<p>hey leeznon. I'm taking the classes that are listed on the UT transfer guide along with basics like history,english, ect. I'm not taking the eastfied core curriculum because it has a lot of classes that are useless to me, and omits some classes that UT requires</p>

<p>Do you think it makes a differnece in terms of getting accepted?</p>

<p>It probably won't IF you take the right classes within the sub specifications, but you'll end up taking more hours than necessary and possibly hurt your GPA..my advice is take the absolutely necessary courses to the school(s) you are planning to transfer to, and the ones that pertain to your degree</p>

<p>Thanks, the reason why I wanted to know was because maybe the core would be accepted by all majors and I'm still not sure what I'm gonna major in.</p>

<p>best thing to do is to focus on the necessary classes along with the utmost basic classes</p>

<p>Is it possible to transfer as an Economics major with a 3.5, a C in Micro and no calculus?
The micro class I took at ACC was awful.</p>

<p>I was wondering if by taking the Business Foundations courses, will a minor be added on my diploma? I will be majoring in electrical engineering so I can't really minor in business. I want to take some business classes though because it will help my career as an engineer.</p>

<p>Are there any prerequisites for the external transfer to Economics?</p>

<p>mcalvellox, you're going to need calculus 1 and calculus 2 as an external transfer</p>

<p>So I can't transfer if I haven't taken any Calculus?</p>