FREQUENTLY
ASKED QUESTIONS
Q. Your pre-application course requirements do not include
a university-level course in Finance. Isn't preparation in Finance
useful, and if so, why is it not a requirement?
A. Certainly Economics and Finance are closely related
disciplines, and undergraduate preparation in Finance is useful
to students in our Program. In assessing an applicant's academic
transcript, our Admissions Committee does give positive weight
to courses in Finance. But the target admission group for our Program
consists of students who are completing or have recently completed
undergraduate studies in Economics. Finance is typically taught
in Business Schools, and in some universities Finance courses are
only open to students enrolled in business programs -- meaning
that undergraduate Economics students are not able to take them.
To require that our applicants have at least one course in Finance
would deny access to students who come from such universities.
Q. I am not certain that I fully understand all of your
pre-application course requirements. Can you be more explicit?
A. We require that applicants have either completed
or are in the process of completing full-year-equivalent, university-level
courses in each of calculus, statistics, intermediate microeconomics,
and intermediate macroeconomics. A full-year-equivalent course
is one that either spans an entire academic year or consists of
2 courses, each of one semester's duration.
Mathematics departments in virtually all universities
around the world offer a fairly standard full-year-equivalent,
introductory course in calculus, and it is this standard that we
require.
Introductory courses in Statistics, on the other
hand, vary markedly across universities and even within a university.
What we require is that an applicant have in-depth preparation
in the following topics: Sample Statistics; Probability Theory;
Discrete and Continuous Random Variables, including the concepts
of Expected Value, Variance, and the Covariance and Correlation
between two random variables; The Central Limit Theory and Sampling
Distributions; Hypothesis Testing; Linear and Multiple Regression.
It is not possible to cover all these topics in depth in a less
than full-year-equivalent course.
In regard to our requirement of a full-year-equivalent
course in each of intermediate-level microeconomic theory and macroeconomic
theory, some applicants are uncertain of the meaning of "intermediate-level".
The following should clarify this: Virtually all
universities offer various "levels"of courses in economic
theory. The introductory-level course invariably consists
of one semester of micro and one semester of
macro, and this introductory-level course is a pre-requisite
to higher-level courses. We naturally assume that all applicants
will
have completed introductory-level micro and macro and we require
that they also complete a full-year-equivalent, higher-level
course in each of microeconomics and macroeconomics. Designators
for such
higher-level courses do vary from university to university. For
example, one university might offer successive one-semester courses
called "Intermediate Micro I" and "Intermediate
Micro II", while another university might label these courses "Intermediate
Micro" and "Advanced Micro", respectively.
Q. After reading the preceding answer, I am still not
certain whether I satisfy your pre-application course requirements.
Can I send you a copy of my academic transcript and have you
review it prior to my making an application?
A. It is up to the applicant to determine whether
he/she meets the pre-application requirements. Given the size of
our program and the number
of applications we receive, we simply do not
have sufficient administrative and academic staff to review transcripts
of prospective applicants.
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