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Chapter V: Special Degrees and Pre-Professional
Studies
Several special degree programs are offered by
the joint cooperation of LS&A and other colleges or schools
within the University. Admission to some of these programs is
highly competitive. Because many of these programs require specific
courses for admission, it is important for students to identify
program interests early in their undergraduate careers. Although
the basic requirements are summarized in this chapter, students
should consult academic advisors associated with the various
programs.
Many LS&A students are interested in applying
for admission to a professional school either after some liberal
arts studies or after completing an LS&A degree. The second
half of this chapter describes several pre-professional courses
of study. Pre-professional advising is available at both the
Academic Advising Center and the Office of Career Planning and
Placement.
Special Joint Degree Programs
Public Policy (Bachelor of Arts and
Master of Public Policy)
The Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy offers
an accelerated program in public policy for exceptional undergraduates
at the University of Michigan. The program enables students in
political
science, or economics,
or the BGS degree program to complete both a bachelor's degree
and the two-year Master of Public Policy (M.P.P.) degree in five
years of study. Candidates for this program are selected by the
Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy during the junior year.
In the senior year, students elect the full sequence of Public
Policy core courses, most of which simultaneously satisfy concentration
or cognate requirements for the bachelor's degree while counting
towards the M.P.P. degree. The A.B. or B.G.S. degree is awarded
at the end of the senior year, and the M.P.P. degree after one
additional year of study.
For this accelerated program, students need to
complete a minimum 100 LS&A credits in the 120 necessary
for the undergraduate degree. All elections that are listed in
the LS&A Bulletin and the Public Policy courses that
are cross-listed with ECON and POLSCI are used to calculate LS&A
credit.
The eligibility requirements for the accelerated
joint program include completion of at least 100 credits toward
the undergraduate degree which must include one calculus (or
higher level mathematics/statistics) course. At least twenty-four
of the 100 credits must be in ECON or POLSCI with no fewer than
six credits in either department. These credit requirements must
be completed by the time of the first enrollment in the Gerald
R. Ford School of Public Policy. Courses may be taken in the
Spring or Summer half-terms if necessary. In addition, applicants
for the accelerated program must show an academic record that
is demonstrably superior to that of students entering on the
regular track. This means that the student record must meet or
exceed the median scores for the entering class: a cumulative
GPA of 3.4 and a Quantitative Graduate Records Examination (GRE)
score of 660.
Further information can be found under the departmental
program statements of Economics and Political Science in Chapter
VI or by visiting the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
in 440 Lorch Hall. Interested undergraduates should begin consultation
in the sophomore year; application is made in the junior year.

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