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Economics
Bachelor of Arts - Economics
Curriculum Map
| Program Goals | College Goals | |||||||||||||
| Course | 1 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
| EC 101 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 102 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 206 | Yes | |||||||||||||
| EC 216 | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||||
| EC 217 | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||||
| EC 218 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 223 | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||||
| EC 225 | Yes | |||||||||||||
| EC 241 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 242 | Yes | |||||||||||||
| EC 250 | Yes | |||||||||||||
| EC 265 | Yes | |||||||||||||
| EC 271 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 320 | Yes | Yes | Yes | |||||||||||
| EC 396 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||
| EC 397 | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ||||||||||
Program Goals
- Demonstrate an understanding of the basic models of microeconomics and macroeconomics - using verbal, graphical, and mathematical methods.
- Apply these basic models - as well as further refined and sophisticated models - to analyze specific economic issues.
- Use quantitative techniques in economic applications.
- Students must demonstrate proficiency in written communication.
- Students must demonstrate proficiency in a foreign language through the intermediate level.
- Students must become informed global citizens and gain intercultural awareness through a study abroad experience.
- Students must become acquainted with different ages, societies, and cultures and learn how to use a variety of historical sources.
- Students must be able to reason abstractly and appreciate the elegance of abstract structure.
- Students must understand the methods of scientific discovery and experimental design.
- Students must acquire problem-solving and research capability by identifying, locating, evaluating, and effectively using information.
- Students must be able to analyze and understand the creative process, assimilate experience, and communicate it.
- Students must be able to interpret words, images, objects, and/or actions that are expressions of human culture.
- Students must understand the complex nature of social structures and/or human relationships that involve issues of inequality and difference.
- Students must explore ecological, policy, social, cultural, and/or historical dimensions of human relationship to the environment.
