econ and stats toward 'math' in bcpm?

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sunset823

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I am taking calculus-based economics, as well as a statistics class, for a policy degree. Though these are obviously not explicitly 'science', they are both quite math heavy, so I was wondering if they would count toward bcpm on amcas.

In undergrad my stats class counted as a 'Bachelor of Science' class, as well as calc-based intermediate econ (which is basically the same as the class I'm taking)

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stats definitely, i'll let someone else answer bout econ
 
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As an Econ major let me say I was very tempted to count some of my Economics classes as math, particularly my financial investments and game theory class which were almost completely numbers based. I called AMCAS and they said I could count whatever I wanted towards my BCPM. In the end I didnt because I didnt want it to appear as if my manner of counting classes as math was inconsistent and favorable to my BCPM gpa, ultimately however, its your call.
 
as someone else said, econ is considered social science. despite the fact that econometrics and mathematical economics were the most difficult, math-intensive courses i've ever taken (10x harder than vector calc and linear alg combined), i don't think those would be considered mathematics courses.

so stats will probably be considered BCPM, but not econ. too much of a grey area there.
 
I agree with the other posters -- I counted my econ courses, even the calc based ones, as social science.
 
statistics for sure
 
What about psychological statistics? I'm a psych major so I had to take that. Also, what about physiological psychology? It was tons of biology.
 
as long as you can defend it during an interview then you can add it to your BCPM average. engineers can typically pick and choose since their classes might involve a lot of calculus or biological information (for BMEs). computer science could count if you're doing mathematical modeling in a particular class. A for-loop is not math though.
 
I counted econometrics and mathematical economics as bcpm -- everything else I didn't. I too had several econ classes where the professor seriously walked in the door the first day, started writing equations, and didn't stop until the last day of class -- but I didn't want someone to think I was trying to cheat, so I just left it as a social science.
 
Thanks for the advice - I will do stats, but not econ - I figured that econ would be hard to get away with, and the advice from the econ majors has proved that.

As for computer science, I took AP C++ programming in high school; the most complex math we got on there was basic algebra, haha, so I doubt that it would count unless you're dealing with complex systems that might have some biological relevance. I just feel that for the level of math needed for game theory and advanced econ, it's unfair to not count that and count comp-sci.
 
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