Bachelors | 77.0%
- Applicants must have a B.A. or B.Sc. honours degree (a four year undergraduate bachelor's degree) in one of the traditional disciplines (Anthropology, Biology, Business Administration, Chemistry, Computing & Information Systems, Economics, Geography, Humanities, Mathematics, Physics & Astronomy, Philosophy, or Psychology)
- Applicant must also have an overall academic average of at least an upper second-class standing (B+/77%) in the work of the last ten full academic credits or the last two undergraduate years (full-time equivalent)
- Prospective students must have a university course in differential and integral calculus, and one in probability and statistics or the equivalent
- Students are also required to have some familiarity with linear algebra and be capable of programming at an elementary level in at least one computational language
- In addition, a course in either differential equations or advanced statistics is required, depending on whether the student's area of research will be mathematics or statistics based
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