micro 1 - easy
macro 1 - easy
micro 2 - slightly harder than econ1101, explains stuff more indepth which you were just given in econ1101. top lecturer... best i've had out of 20 or so lecturers and most of my mates agree too.
macro 2 - slightly harder than econ2102, involves a bit of calculus. lecturer is a douche.
emet1001 - easy... if you got a A/B in methods and a C/D in micro 1, you'll pass imo. i didn't rock up to any lecturers and got a nice mark at the end... although i did well in my two first year maths units and micro 1.
regression modelling - was a bit dry for my liking, lecturer is the funniest bastard i know though. didn't do too well in it though (passed but not by much). rote learned all of the course... but you can certianly do well in it (know heaps of people getting D's in it)
emet2007 - only had 3 hours of it so far but i can certianly see the similarites between this and stat2008. a few years ago you could not do them both (they were incompatible courses... if you do stat2008 and emet2007, one of them will not count in your degree). emet2007 uses more real-world data and isn't a 100% statistics course... you get a bunch of real world data and perform statistical tests on what happens if x was introduced or whatever.
lecturer for this course is better than the one for stat2008 i reckon... plus it's taught at a slower pace (from what i can gauge so far). lecturer for stat2008 will give you a formula without deriving it (or will tell you to read his thick-ass brick) whereas the lecturer for emet2007 will spend time deriving it slowly for you. also the midsem for stat2008 tends to be hard!
and yes STAT courses tend to be very maths heavy. that's because it's aimed at actuary students, whose degree is 50% or so STAT courses. and to get into actuary you need specialists maths. so i don't suggest you do anything other than STAT1003, STAT1008, STAT2008 and maybe STAT2032 unless your maths background is stellar.
EMET3xxx courses can also get quite tricky... anything after EMET2008 is when stuff gets challanging imo.
Hi,
I was wondering for the econometric subjects (EMET) offered by the College of Business and Economics, what level of maths is required in order to get good results.
I've only done Mathematical Methods, is this adequate? I've heard some of the statistics courses are pretty full on and even people who had done Specialist Maths had trouble.
So just wanted to know how econometrics compares with statistics at the uni.
And also if you have an opinion on the core subjects for economics, like econ1101, econ1102, econ2101 please feel free to share them.
Thanks for your time.