Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA and took very little math - stats, some algebra, nothing rigorous
?I had to take at least Business calculus and a year of stats. And this was at a b/c rated state univ. for a BA.
What college doesn't require at least calc for business?
I’m the OP of the “should I double major” thread. I’m pretty sure my college does not (for finance) so I’m trying to minor in math.
what school is this? How can a finance degree not require some advanced math? I'm floored. Man, college degrees really are meaningless these days.
Anonymous wrote:My son is in his last year. He hates math.
He took
2 economics -easy
2 stats
Calc
2 accounting
He almost didnt take business because of this but he worked hard and had tutoring for calc and one accounting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA and took very little math - stats, some algebra, nothing rigorous
?I had to take at least Business calculus and a year of stats. And this was at a b/c rated state univ. for a BA.
What college doesn't require at least calc for business?
I’m the OP of the “should I double major” thread. I’m pretty sure my college does not (for finance) so I’m trying to minor in math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think she should go to the colleges website she is interested in and See what courses are required for business majors.
This is the best answer. OP still hasn’t answered what major she means by business ( Business Administration/management?) of just any major in the business school.
+1. And OP hasn't indicated anything about the selectivity of the schools that might be of interest. Top undergrad business schools typically require calc at some point in time.
even my b/c rated business school for a BA required business calculus, and this was 30 yrs ago.
Maybe it depends
My son's degree is a Bachelor of Commerce. No specialization is required.
Anonymous[b wrote:]I have an MBA and took very little math - stats, some algebra, nothing rigorous[/b]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA and took very little math - stats, some algebra, nothing rigorous
?I had to take at least Business calculus and a year of stats. And this was at a b/c rated state univ. for a BA.
What college doesn't require at least calc for business?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think she should go to the colleges website she is interested in and See what courses are required for business majors.
This is the best answer. OP still hasn’t answered what major she means by business ( Business Administration/management?) of just any major in the business school.
+1. And OP hasn't indicated anything about the selectivity of the schools that might be of interest. Top undergrad business schools typically require calc at some point in time.
even my b/c rated business school for a BA required business calculus, and this was 30 yrs ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think she should go to the colleges website she is interested in and See what courses are required for business majors.
This is the best answer. OP still hasn’t answered what major she means by business ( Business Administration/management?) of just any major in the business school.
+1. And OP hasn't indicated anything about the selectivity of the schools that might be of interest. Top undergrad business schools typically require calc at some point in time.
Anonymous wrote:I have an MBA and took very little math - stats, some algebra, nothing rigorous
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on what type of business. Just like a biologist does not need as much math as a physicist, someone in marketing (business school) does not need as much as someone in Finance.
Scroll up...OP said real estate focus in subsequent posts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks. So another question. Should she study real estate as a major? I see some schools have it as a major like Penn, NYU, etc.
Why, land is the only thing that matters. It’s the only thing that lasts.
It's the only thing worth working for, dying for, and fighting for.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on what type of business. Just like a biologist does not need as much math as a physicist, someone in marketing (business school) does not need as much as someone in Finance.