Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a conversation for your child, the actual student, to have with a professor. Your role is to encourage that conversation, not to plan his schedule and course of study.
And the student is still a first-year just taking Intro to Econ. Give them time to take more courses and decide what they would like to major/minor in.
Anonymous wrote:This is a conversation for your child, the actual student, to have with a professor. Your role is to encourage that conversation, not to plan his schedule and course of study.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. The LAC does not have computer science classes at all. Nor any statistics major/minor, it looks to me just intro statistics classes. There is a Math major and minor, but most of the offerred classes are pure math not applied math. There is one econometrics class offered in the econ department. There doesn’t appear to be a math or data science focused option within economics at this college. DC wasn’t sure what he wanted to major in before he went to college - and if I had had to guess, I would have guessed history or psychology - so these “gaps” in the fields of study didn’t jump out at him or me.
PP, you are right that DC can talk to a professor and that is a good idea. But professors tend to have an academia focused view. I want to understand a practical, employment focused view. So hoping someone can advise if there are ways to patch together a major at a traditional liberal arts college that could open doors for careers in econometrics type work. Oddly my sister suggested he look into an econ major and physics minor - her older child at a much bigger college has said that the hedge funds and investment banks want physics majors nowadays.
I want him to major in whatever is his choice. My hope is that he adds a minor or double major in something making him employable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am confused: most econ majors are highly quantitative in general. He should go talk to thr economics department and ask about the level of math and stats. Also he should look at the classes/syllabi to see if they cover topics he is interested in.
This
Just pile-up on econ courses with heavy math content. There should be plenty

Anonymous wrote:I am confused: most econ majors are highly quantitative in general. He should go talk to thr economics department and ask about the level of math and stats. Also he should look at the classes/syllabi to see if they cover topics he is interested in.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused: most econ majors are highly quantitative in general. He should go talk to thr economics department and ask about the level of math and stats. Also he should look at the classes/syllabi to see if they cover topics he is interested in.