B.S. in Applied Math
Environmental Sciences Option - 124 Hours
Bubble Chart
Mathematics - 42 Hours
- MATH 1001 - Introduction to Mathematics
- MATH 2014 - Calculus I
- MATH 2024 - Calculus II
- MATH 2073 - Calculus III
- MATH 3073 - Differential Equations
- MATH 3033 - Fundamentals of Modern Mathematics
- MATH 3553 - Modern Algebra
or MATH 4083 - Introduction to Topology - STAT 3813 - Statistical Methods for Scientists and Engineers
or STAT 4413 - Probability - MATH 4003 - Advanced Calculus I
- MATH 4503 - Introduction to Numerical Methods
- MATH 4123 - Linear Algebra and Matrix Theory
- MATH electives - 3000 level or above - 9 Hours
Computer Science - 3 Hours
- CS 2503 - Scientific Programming
Science and Engineering - 37 Hours
- CHEM 1013 - General Chemistry I
- CHEM 1011 - General Chemistry I Lab
- CHEM 1023 - General Chemistry II
- CHEM 1021 - General Chemistry II Lab
- CHEM 3013 - Organic Chemistry
- CHEM 3011 - Organci Chemistry Lab
- CHEM 4053 - Enviornmental Chemistry
- PHYS 2053 - General Physics I
- PHYS 2051 - General Physics I Lab
- BIOL 2124 - Genetics
- BIOL 3084 - General Microbiology
- GEOL 1014 - Physical Geology
- GEOL 4513 - Hydrolody
- CHE 4163 - Environmental Engineering
Other - 24 Hours
- ENGL 1033 - Exposition and Argumentation
- ENGL 3033 - Writing for the Professions
- General Electives - 18 Hours
Blocks
- Block I - 6 Hours
- Block II - 12 Hours
To become a candidate for a degree in applied mathematics, a student must complete all mathematics courses in the curriculum with a grade-point average of at least 2.0, and earn a 2.0 or better overall.