<p>Who here is double or triple majoring. I am doing a double major in Statistics and Managerial Economics, what about you.</p>
<p>Women's Studies and History at UCLA ^^;;</p>
<p>Psychology and premed?</p>
<p>aero and physics, possibly</p>
<p>I'm considering Political Science and Economics.</p>
<p>Douoble majoring doesn't really mean much.....a better use of academic time is to take advanced standing (grad) classes in a major rather than to spread wide but shallow.</p>
<p>Can you explain what you mean, hazmat?</p>
<p>when the time comes Politicial Science and Marketing or Journalism</p>
<p>Political Science and Rhetoric</p>
<p>Or, to save time and money, major in poli sci and minor in rhetoric.</p>
<p>To make this thread informative instead of just chatty, do you find that it is difficult to double major? That you have much less free time than your single-majoring friends?</p>
<p>The difficulty of a double major depends on a few different factors. </p>
<ol>
<li>The particular subjects you're double majoring in</li>
<li>The school you go to (whether or not it requires a lot of general education requirements)</li>
<li>The amount of prior credit you come into college with </li>
<li>In relation to No. 3: How generous your school is with awarding prior college credit.</li>
</ol>
<p>For instance, if you go to a univeristy that's generous with AP credit and you're awarded 40+ college credits from AP tests, then your courseload won't be horribly heavy because you won't have to worry about general education requirements that much. It's much easier to spread out all of the classes you need for a double major if you already have a lot of prior credit.</p>
<p>Isn't another issue if they're related? Like can't a certain number of courses/unit hours count for both majors?</p>
<p>Computer Engineering and Math</p>
<p>Nutrition and Math (possibly)</p>
<p>In a lot of cases, celebrian25, the school specifies that certain classes CANNOT count for both majors.</p>
<p>At UCSC, you can major in two kinds of Biology and it will count as a double-major. You are allowed to double on the core requirements because, well, there's no need to take them twice, as there's a very limited series you must take as a major. You cannot, however, double on the upper division courses.</p>
<p>(planning) economics and chinese</p>
<p>Economics (w/Math minor), biology minor (on a pre-med track), and possibly Biomedical Engineering.</p>
<p>I really am not sure how the pricing goes for double majors and minors. So you pay the tuition they state like $30,000, then you have to pay more to double major and minor? Thanks for your help :)</p>
<p>When people say that they might save money by not double majoring they usually mean that it won't take them as long to graduate. You only pay extra money for other majors or minors if you have to stay in college longer than if you just completed a single major, but it's not as though there is a set fee for pursuing extra majors and minors.</p>
<p>Marketing & Economics at Virginia Tech</p>