<p>What are you majoring in at Georgetown?</p>
<p>I am undecided between Biology or Biochemistry. Either way, I will be minoring in Spanish. And since I will still have some left over places to shove some electives, I may persue a minor in psychology as well. What about you?</p>
<p>No clue in SFS.</p>
<p>i'm in sfs...i think i'm going to major in culp, and get a certificate in european studies</p>
<p>Double in Finance and International Business and minor in either Math, Econ or Gov't</p>
<p>I'm in the college. I think I'm going to double major Government and Economics with a minor in Arabic.</p>
<p>lol C-revs looks like we're doing the exact same course then</p>
<p>Haha that's awesome. My AIM is Sk8onbro37 btw, feel free to message me</p>
<p>i thinking about a major in english and maybe a music minor</p>
<p>Biology major with a minor in government and maybe in french, but it will probably be difficult to get all those classes to fit</p>
<p>you cant dbl major in econ and govt...that thing is political econ...which is a mix of govt and econ</p>
<p>international health!</p>
<p>Is anyone majoring in IR?</p>
<p>Chinese/Japanese Major, Portuguese Major, French Minor in the Faculty of Language and Linguistics.</p>
<p>-Deion S.</p>
<p>C-Revs and One2...I'm planning on doing the same thing, but probably a language or english minor instead..popular major!</p>
<p>I second International Health! Glad to see some out there. Gtown 2010, are you going pre-med?</p>
<p>Double Major in the College
Philosophy/Econ</p>
<p>Might minor in a language. Doubt it though.
Arabic would be the most useful in a career. Russian or German would be better for my majors.</p>
<p>Definitely math, strongly consider doubling up with Econ.</p>
<p>If one would major in European Studies, what languages should he or she take? Middle Eastern Studies? Also, do these degrees/certificates count as a degree in international relations, just more specific?</p>
<p>Jonathan, </p>
<p>You can't major in European Studies or Middle Eastern Studies. You can only get certificates. Therefore, they are meant to be a supplement to a regular degree and not a degree in an of itself.</p>
<p>There are also no actual majors called "International Relations." There are several internationally oriented majors in the SFS, including International Politics, International Political Economy, International Economics, Culture & Politics, and Regional Comparative Studies.</p>
<p>The closest thing you can do to "majoring" in regions is do the Regional Comparative Studies major, which you can either pick one region to study extensively or compare two regions. It is more sociologically and anthropologically based.</p>