<p>OK i got a schedule conflict and was hoping you guys would help.</p>
<p>Preda is teaching 32A next quarter, MWF 2-3pm</p>
<p>but there is also the seminar for my GE cluster on F from 12-3pm</p>
<p>Preda is a really good teacher i heard and 32a is important for my major. although its not required, upper div econ use a lot of multivariable (correct me if im wrong)</p>
<p>the seminar is really interesting (time travel)</p>
<p>i still dont know which one to choose...</p>
<p>I know i have to use my priority on one of them....</p>
<p>Help? Since when is that anything new? You need all the help you can get. (Just like in your “love” life. Tell me if the iron is still good for breakfast and if your arms are getting any “larger” (larger does not necessarily mean muscular).) :rolleyes:</p>
<p>Speak English. We don’t speak “engineer”/“back-to-the-future”-ese. Believe it or not -</p>
<p>some of us are North Campus! Can’t even watch a Michael J. Fox movie without ripping our eyes out and obfuscating anything we say by citing Shakespeare and Chomsky… concurrently. :rolleyes:</p>
<p>I’m an econ major; you don’t need 32A to excel in upper div econ. You only need to know basic multi-variable differentiation, which could take you about 15 minutes to learn in Econ 11; you don’t need to take a whole extra course for it (unless you’re sure you’ll get an A in 32A, in which case it’ll simply serve as a GPA booster).</p>
<p>^ I know Anderson requires or at least prefers MBA applicants to have taken basic differential calculus in college. So maybe 31A is sufficient for this. If you want to be absolutely sure, go to the admissions office at Anderson and ask them if 31A is enough, or if taking 32A will significantly help you with MBA admissions.</p>
<p>But if you’re planning on going to grad school for an Econ Masters degree or Phd, take as much math and stats as you can stomach. That’s the usual advice I hear from Econ grad students and professors.</p>