Anonymous wrote:If she doesn't like economics she will be miserable.
A good master's in econ program will be highly mathematical.
I think terminal master's in economics are not as common as PhD track.
Does your DD have a policy interests suitable for exploring in graduate school?
You both should also read this 2020 blog post by a professional economist.
https://macromomblog.com/2020/07/29/economics-is-a-disgrace/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College masters program websites may tell you exactly how much econ is expected. Some might even have a pre-masters program for taking those courses - masters programs are cash cows for the university.
Good idea, thank you from OP. Maybe she can do the pre-masters classes at night.
DD has strong aptitude in math, but has never liked nor done well in economics (she took intro and macro in college, they were probably her two worst grades- but she took thru MV calculus in high school and scored 800 on the math portion of the SAT). She would do this to have a grounding in economics to be a stronger candidate for policy jobs.
Anonymous wrote:DD is a senior in college, political science major, and is looking for jobs in policy, think tanks, so on. She has repeatedly hit a barrier in her job search that she has no economics background. I’m confident she’ll figure out some kind of post graduation job, but to move ahead in her career, I suspect she’ll need background that she doesn’t have.
Is it a reasonable goal to get a masters in economics for someone with no university level economics/math background? I guess I have always envisioned persons seeking that masters to have an undergrad degree or at least exposure in economics, math, business, that sort of study.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College masters program websites may tell you exactly how much econ is expected. Some might even have a pre-masters program for taking those courses - masters programs are cash cows for the university.
Good idea, thank you from OP. Maybe she can do the pre-masters classes at night.
DD has strong aptitude in math, but has never liked nor done well in economics (she took intro and macro in college, they were probably her two worst grades- but she took thru MV calculus in high school and scored 800 on the math portion of the SAT). She would do this to have a grounding in economics to be a stronger candidate for policy jobs.
Anonymous wrote:College masters program websites may tell you exactly how much econ is expected. Some might even have a pre-masters program for taking those courses - masters programs are cash cows for the university.