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The B.A. degree requires a
concentration in addition to the CSC major courses and the
area studies courses. A student working towards a B.A. must
take four courses in an area outside Computer Science. Popular
choices include MCIS, psychology and math, although any are
possible. In a way, the concentration is a built-in minor.
The CS Department publishes a
list of courses for each
academic area that fulfill the 4-course requirement. This list
ensures that a B.A. major takes the necessary introductory
courses as well as some intermediate courses and an
upper-level one in order to get perspective on the entire
scope of the academic discipline.
Moreover, the two area studies courses in the area of the
concentration must be in the same discipline as the concentration,
or a closely related discipline. Again, the CS Department has
determined what these courses must be and has included them in the
list.
Here's an example. Suppose that you want to do your
concentration in accounting. Then the two area studies courses are
ECO 101 -- Principles of Macroeconomics
ECO 102 -- Principles of Microeconomics
Then you must take the following four accounting courses:
ACC 211 -- Principles of Accounting I
ACC 212 -- Principles of Accounting II
ACC 301 -- Intermediate Accounting I
ACC 302 -- Intermediate Accounting II
The four accounting courses actually make up the concentration,
but the two economics courses serve as necessary background. Note
that these two courses still count as your Area II credit.
There are many areas in Area II: psychology, anthropology,
sociology, communication studies, political science, women's
studies. Unfortunately, you must forego those areas if you decide
to do your concentration in accounting, because you must take ECO
101 and ECO 102. So plan wisely, and see your advisor if you have
any questions! (By the way, just because you use ECO 101 and 102
for your Area II courses, you can still take classes in Area II
and count them as free electives or extra courses.)
Honors students who are working towards a B.A. in Computer
Science do not have to take the two area studies courses, but must
still complete the four course sequence in the published list. If
either of the two area studies courses are pre-requisites for the
concentration courses, then the student is urged to complete them
as well. See a departmental advisor or the chair for more details.
Here's a complete list of the approved concentrations for CS Majors who
are pursuing a B.A. degree.
If you have a minor, that can count as a concentration. This
must be a complete minor that has been approved and published in
the College Catalog. In most cases, a minor has more courses than
a concentration so it more than fulfils the intent of the B. A.
concentration.
Two examples are:
- Business Minor -- see page 102 of the catalog,
7 courses
- Cognitive Science Minor -- see page 144 of the
catalog, 6 courses
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