Hi,
Can anyone give a run down of the majors you can choose in a commerce degree. I just want to know which ones are the best for job prospectives, which ones involve more maths, which involve more public speaking and presentations and which ones are plain boring.
Cheers!
Look up the handbook mate.
I'll give you a quick run down anyway.
Accounting/Finance - This combination is what defines most commerce students at unsw. Accounting is something that has to be experienced in order to be understood. A taste of first year accounting courses will help you decide whether or not its you for. Finance is essentially learning a shit load of formulas and applying it to the question. It has a lot of maths. Accouting is probably the major that will help the most in terms of finding employment.
Management/International Business/HRM/Marketing - These majors are english-based, and essentially require you to read some textbooks, lecture notes, rote learn what's in them and regurgitate it in either a presentation/test/essay format. There is also a lot of group work involved. These majors are not going to help you get employed but they can be interesting and if done with another more substantial major, can be a nice change from the quantitative stuff that should be done in any commerce degree.
Economics/Econometrics/Financial Economics - If you're not a huge accounting/finance fan, you're probably doing a bit of economics. The level of maths you do for economics varies on your specific major. A normal economics major will require you to do some econometrics which is a brand of maths that requires more interpretation from data sets than simply plugging in a few figures in to a formula and getting a result. Econometrics is just specialising in this series of maths and is more maths-intensive as you'll be doing more maths-related courses. Financial economics is an unusual major in which it specialises in econometric modelling which is getting a series of figures from a financial source (think prices of a stock/share over time), sticking it into a program, making a model and then interpreting it.
There are other majors out there (like actuarial, information systems, etc) but I'll let others explain them.