So I made a mistake choosing a major for my masters.... unfortunately you can't just switch at NJIT you must re-apply which wasn't a problem.
A year later, I successfully switched from MSCS to MSIS and with only 2 classes was looking forward to graduating this December... but not so quickly!
When I got my new acceptance letter they told me I must take a pre-req. Management or Accounting class for IS which wasn't required for CS. I thought it was a joke, but nobody at the school was laughing. So now I'm stuck with the idea of either taking a class and wasting another semester on an undergraduate class that I neither want to take or realistically need to take (considering I will be done with the masters program and taking an undgrad class like a loser just to graduate) or simply take an exam in Financial Accounting to demonstrate I don't need to take the course.
Anybody taking Financial Accounting in College? I understand its like Accounting 101 and easy for some but not so easy for those of us that don't get along with math... any suggestions?
I'm thinking the cheapest way out (I'm only good in accounting when it comes to my money) is to just study on my own to take the damn test... but should I fail I'll really screw myself.
Ideas please
thanks,
--Russ
A year later, I successfully switched from MSCS to MSIS and with only 2 classes was looking forward to graduating this December... but not so quickly!
When I got my new acceptance letter they told me I must take a pre-req. Management or Accounting class for IS which wasn't required for CS. I thought it was a joke, but nobody at the school was laughing. So now I'm stuck with the idea of either taking a class and wasting another semester on an undergraduate class that I neither want to take or realistically need to take (considering I will be done with the masters program and taking an undgrad class like a loser just to graduate) or simply take an exam in Financial Accounting to demonstrate I don't need to take the course.
Anybody taking Financial Accounting in College? I understand its like Accounting 101 and easy for some but not so easy for those of us that don't get along with math... any suggestions?
I'm thinking the cheapest way out (I'm only good in accounting when it comes to my money) is to just study on my own to take the damn test... but should I fail I'll really screw myself.
Ideas please
thanks,
--Russ