A possible CFM course sequence (Fall 2015-2017):
Year 1 |
||
|---|---|---|
| Fall (1A) | Winter (1B) |
Spring WORK TERM 1 |
| AFM 101 | AFM 102 | |
| AFM 131 | AFM 121 | |
| CS 135 | CS 136 | |
| MATH 135 | MATH 136 | |
| MATH 137 | MATH 138 | |
Year 2 |
||
|---|---|---|
| Fall (2A) |
Winter WORK TERM 2 |
Spring (2B) |
| AFM 272 | AFM 372 | |
| CS 245 | CS 241 | |
| CS 246 | ECON 102 | |
| ECON 101 | ENGL 1191 | |
| STAT 230 | STAT 231 | |
Year 3 |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Fall WORK TERM 3 |
Winter (3A) |
Spring WORK TERM 4 |
| AFM 231 | ||
| AFM 424 | ||
| CS 240 | ||
| MATH 239 | ||
| General elective3 | ||
Year 4 |
||
|---|---|---|
| Fall (3B) |
Winter WORK TERM 5 |
Spring (4A) |
| AFM 425 | AFM 322 | |
| CS 341 | Arts elective2 | |
| STAT 373 | Arts elective2 | |
| Arts elective2 | CS elective4 | |
| General elective3 | General elective3 | |
Year 5 |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Fall WORK TERM 6 |
Winter (4B) |
Spring CONVOCATION |
| Arts elective2 | ||
| Arts elective2 | ||
| CS elective4 | ||
| CS elective4 | ||
| General elective3 | ||
1. Or ENGL 210F - Genres of Business Communication
2. Three of the following: AFM 291 Intermediate Financial Accounting 1; any AFM course at the 300 or 400 level not listed above (for which the necessary pre-requisites have been met); ECON 201 Microeconomic Theory 1; ECON 202 Macroeconomics; ECON 206 Money and Banking 1; ECON 207 Economic Growth and Development 1; ECON 231 Introduction to International Economics; ECON 332 International Finance; ECON 344 Marketing: Principles of Marketing and Consumer Economics; PHIL 215 Professional and Business Ethics; SPCOM 223 Public Speaking; and two additional AFM courses at the 300 or 400 level not listed above (for which the necessary pre-requisites have been met)
3. Four additional courses
4. One additional course from CS 440-498 or CO 487 Applied Cryptography and two additional courses from CS 340-398, CS 440-498 or CO 487 Applied Cryptography
Disclaimer: This is not a substitute for the official degree requirements. If there is a question of interpretation or a discrepancy, the Undergraduate Calendar always takes precedence.