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Show Business and Economics — Economics Banking. In addition to the business and economics core requirements for all students, (option of Economics 430 in the core required,) those students wishing a degree in Business Economics are required to complete Economics 320, 309, 301 or 302 (to complete sequence), 350, 351, 499; plus an additional 12 hours of approved courses in Economics. General Economics—The core in General Economics leads to a bachelor of arts degree and affords the student a broad interdisciplinary program in the related fields of History, Languages, Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, and Anthropology as preparation for graduate study. General Economics majors are not subject to the business and economics core requirements but must complete a minor field. In addition to the general education core required by the School of Business and Economics, the student must complete 24 credits in foreign language and any other basic requirements for the B.A. degree. The following courses are also required: Accounting 201, 202, and 254; one class selected from Management 330, 325 or Marketing 301; Economics 274 or 375; 250, 251, 301, 302, 309, 320, 350, 499 and eight hours of electives in Economics. The student will also select at least one class from each of the following four groups: Law Political Science 401, Management 320 Philosophy English 476; Philosophy 115, 320. Organization Economics 417; Management 301; Political Science 110, 111, 370, 375, 381. International Studies Economics 311, 419; Anthropology 310; Philosophy 207; History 433, 440, 451, 459, 461, 470; Political Science 349, 381, 383, 384, 385, 448. Economics Minor—A baccalaureate degree candidate may obtain a minor in Economics by completing Economics 101, 102, 301 and/or 302, plus additional approved courses in Economics to total 23 quarter hours, excluding quantitative courses. (At least a "C" average is required.) Business and Economics — Economics Teaching Minor in Economics—A baccalaureate degree candidate may obtain a teaching minor in Economics by completing Economics 101, 102 and 274 plus additional approved electives in Economics to total 24 hours. Suggested electives might include Economics 320, 360, 340 and 386, Finance 101. Composite Teaching Major in Business Education (Economics)—Sec Business Education Composite Teaching Major, School of Education. Social Science Composite Teaching Major—Economics 101, 102, 274 and/or 360 plus additional economics courses to total 20 quarter hours may be used as part of a Social Science Composite Teaching Major. Courses of Instruction SS101. Principles of Economics—Basic institutions of the economy, production of goods, standards of living, the exchange economy, introduction to macro-economics, national income, and levels of employment. A W S (5) 102. Principles of Economics—Introduction to micro-economics. Value and price of goods under varied degrees of competition, and the distribution of income to wages, interest, rent, and profits. A W S (3) 250. Quantitative Analysis and Probability—Statements and logic, set theory, functions, probability distributions and difference equations with economic and business applications. Prerequisite: Mathematics 105 or a score of 28 or above on the mathematics placement test. A W S (4) 251. Statistical Inference—Sampling, estimation, hypothesis testing, and regression analysis as preparation for empirical research in business and economics. Prerequisite: Economics 250 or equivalent. A W S (4) SS274. Economic History of the United States—Development ot resources, commerce, agriculture, manufacturing, labor organizations, finance. A W S (5) 301. Intermediate Theory: Macro-Economics—Theory of general economic equilibrium, aggregate employment, inflation, depression. Prerequisites: Economics 101 and 102. A W S (4) 302. Intermediate Theory: Micro-Economics—Equilibrium and price theory, economics of the firm. Prerequisites: Economics 101 and 102. A W S (4) 234 235 |