York University - Unavailable for 2021/22

UWI International Office

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(416) 736-2100
http://site.info.yorku.ca/
4700 Keele Street
Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3

 

 

 

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Through cross-discipline programming, innovative course design, diverse experiential learning and a supportive community environment, our 53,000 students get the education they need to have big ideas and endless career opportunities.


Below is a list of courses former exchange students have taken at this university in previous years and the UWI courses they have equated to. This is meant as a guidance and interested students still have to complete the Course Equivalency Sheet of the Student Exchange Application and get the departmental approval for the individual courses.


Course Equivalencies

Undergraduate

 

FACULTY DEPARTMENT UWI COURSE CODE UWI COURSE TITLE HOST COURSE CODE HOST COURSE TITLE TERM
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2000 Intermediate Microeconomics I ECON 2300 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory I FALL
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2002 Intermediate Macroeconomics I ECON 2400 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory I FALL
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2025 Statistical Methods ECON 3480 Introductory Statistics for Economists II FALL
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2015 Matrix Algebra for Economics MATH 1025 Applied Linear Algebra FALL
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2001 Intermediate Microeconomics II ECON 2350 Intermediate Microeconomic Theory II SPRING
Social Sciences Economics ECON 2003 Intermediate Macroeconomics II ECON 2450 Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory II SPRING
Social Sciences Economics ECON 3006 International Trade ECON 3150 International Trade SPRING
Social Sciences Economics ECON 3005 Monetary Theory and Policy ECON 3440 Monetary Economics II SPRING
Research

 

FACULTY DEPARTMENT RESEARCH FIELD HOST DEPARTMENT HOST SUPERVISOR TERM
Humanities & Education Literary, Cultural and Communication Studies Creolization and Sound     FALL
Humanities & Education Modern Languages and Linguistics The linguistic manifestation of power within the discourses produced by police officers and civilians from a 'crime hotspot community' in Trinidad Department of Social Science Prof. James Sheptycki FALL

 


 

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