Hi all! I used to lurk in this forum quite a bit a few years ago but after a lot of soul searching, ended up doing my LLM at a B&M school, which was great. Now I am considering DL again and hopefully someone can help me find what I am looking for! I started in a new job, completely in my field but that involves some economics analysis (I don't do it but it helps if I understand it when other people explain their findings to me!). BUT I have not taken an economics course since econ 101 in undergrad many years ago - help! Basically, I would like to find some DL courses on Microeconomics II (not the intro course but one up from that) along with any required math courses. (Tried to do a search but the school finder does not seem to have "Economics" as a degree ) The cheaper the better (but no self-study as I do need some hand holding to get me through this!) although I could try to convince my employer to pay for cheap-ish courses from a relatively well-known school Sorry for the long post and thanks for your help!! JG
DL BACHELOR'S DEGREES IN ECONOMICS Acadia University http://conted.acadiau.ca Athabasca University www.athabascau.ca University of Calicut http://collegeskerala.com/calicut Charles Sturt University www.csu.edu.au Charter Oak State College www.cosc.edu Curtin University of Technology www.curtin.edu.au Eastern Oregon University www.eou.edu Empire State College www.esc.edu Florida State University http://online.fsu.edu University of London www.lon.ac.uk Mary Baldwin College www.mbc.edu Mount Allison University www.mta.ca Murdoch University www.murdoch.edu University of New England www.une.edu.au Open University (England) www.open.ac.uk Open University (Netherlands) www.ouh.nl Queens University www.queensu.ca Southern Cross University www.scu.edu.au Southern New Hampshire University www.snhu.edu Strayer University www.strayer.edu Thomas Edison State College www.tesc.edu University of Waterloo www.uwaterloo.ca
Hi JG, Try these from the University of London: Individual Professional Courses these are postgraduate (Masters) level. Whilst at undergraduate (Bachelors) level see these courses. I'm sure one of these will fit the bill. Best wishes, Brendan