<p>I literally only know what I just Googled, but there is an Operations Research math concentration for the math major: [Cornell</a> Math - The Undergraduate Major in Mathematics](<a href=“http://www.math.cornell.edu/Undergraduate/Major/major.html]Cornell”>http://www.math.cornell.edu/Undergraduate/Major/major.html)</p>
<p>I actually started a new language at Cornell, but I believe if I had continued my French, I would have only needed 1 course to fill the requirement. If I remember correctly, as long as you can place into and complete a 200+ level class, you’re set. A 5 on AP stat will give you credit, but won’t do anything in terms of filling requirements. AP Stat is NOTHING like econ stats. From what (little) I know of other courses AP, AP Stat is more like AEM, PAM, or ILR stats. Econ 3190-3200 are much more advanced (though if you’re doing a math major, my guess is they won’t seem nearly as intense for you by the time you take the sequence). You can also take Econ 3210 instead of 3190-3200, but you seem like you’d want to take the more math-intensive sequence. Econ 3210 is “Applied Econometrics.”</p>
<p>The econ workload is not bad. Problem sets vary by course professor, but from my experience, they usually aren’t even weekly and most don’t take more than a few hours. I would guess only 2 or 3 of my courses gave 10, in a 14 week semester. That said, the exams are relatively challenging, especially compared to most of my other classes. So for your exams, you’ll probably want to study a fair amount for each of them, but that’s very concentrated work efforts. I would say most nights you aren’t doing anything for econ. Then once every 10-14 days you work for several hours on a problem set. Then 2-3 days prior to an exam, you’ll spend a lot of time studying, but that’s only twice a semester (not including finals).</p>