Change of Curriculum Information
See Also: Change of Curriculum Frequently Asked Questions(This information is subject to annual review.)
To apply for change of curriculum to Mays Business School, certain requirements must be met, including successful completion of a subset of specific courses and a cumulative GPR of 3.0 or greater in a minimum of 30 graded hours at Texas A&M University and a maximum of 75 total hours (including transfer credit and pass/fail courses).
Any non-business student enrolled at Texas A&M University may apply for change of curriculum to Mays Business School once the student meets all of the following 3 specific minimum criteria. (Note: All academic information included on the application must appear in a student’s official academic record at Texas A&M University.)
- Cumulative GPR of 3.0 or greater in a minimum of
30 graded hours at Texas A&M University.
- Total college credit hours not to exceed 75
(including transfer credit).
- Complete a minimum of 4 of the following specific courses with a GPR of 3.0 or greater. Two of the four courses must be MATH 141 and MATH 142, or their equivalents. If more than the 4-course minimum are complete when the application for change of curriculum is submitted, grades in all complete courses will be included in the GPR calculation. If completed courses have been attempted more than once, the higher grade(s) will be used to calculate this GPR.
| MATH 141* | Business Mathematics I (or MATH 152*, 166 or 172) |
| MATH 142* | Business Mathematics II – Calculus (or MATH 131, 151* or 171) |
| ENGL 104* | Composition and Rhetoric |
| COMM 203 | Public Speaking (or COMM 205 or 243) |
| ACCT 229 | Introductory Accounting – Financial |
| ACCT 230 | Introductory Accounting – Managerial |
| ECON 202* | Principles of Economics - Microeconomics |
| ECON 203* | Principles of Economics – Macroeconomics |
| INFO 210 | Fundamentals of Information Systems (or AGEC 217, 221 or CPSC 110) |
| MGMT 211 | Legal & Social Environment of Business |
* Credit by exam accepted but no grade is awarded.
Updated September 1, 2006








