Pursuant to Act 261 of March 18, 2015 on Universities (the University Act) with subsequent changes, the following curriculum is established. The programme also follows the Joint Programme Regulations and the Examination Policies and Procedures for The Faculty.
The Master’s programme is organised in accordance with the Ministry of Higher Education and Science’s Order no. 1328 of November 15, 2016 on Bachelor’s and Master’s Programmes at Universities (the Ministerial Order of the Study Programmes) and Ministerial Order no. 1062 of June 30, 2016 on University Examinations (the Examination Order). Further reference is made to Ministerial Order no. 258 of March 18, 2015 (the Admission Order) and Ministerial Order no. 114 of February 3, 2015 (the Grading Scale Order) with subsequent changes.
The programme is offered in Aalborg.
The Master’s programme falls under The Faculty of Engineering and Science, Aalborg University.
The Master’s programme falls under Study Board of Mathematical Sciences
The Master’s programme is associated with the external examiners corps on Mathematics.
(Censorkorpset for matematik).
Applicants with a legal right of admission (retskrav)
Applicants without legal right of admission
Students with another Bachelor degree may, upon application to the Board of Studies, be admitted following a specific academic assessment if the applicant is considered as having comparable educational prerequisites. The University can stipulate requirements concerning conducting additional exams prior to the start of study.
The Master’s programme entitles the graduate to the Danish designation Cand.scient.oecon.. The English designation is: Master of Science (MSc) in Mathematics-Economics.
The Master’s program is a 2-year, research-based, full-time study program. The program is set to 120 ECTS credits.
The Study Board can approve successfully completed (passed) programme elements from other Master’s programmes in lieu of programme elements in this programme (credit transfer). The Study Board can also approve successfully completed (passed) programme elements from another Danish programme or a programme outside of Denmark at the same level in lieu of programme elements within this curriculum. Decisions on credit transfer are made by the Study Board based on an academic assessment. See the Joint Programme Regulations for the rules on credit transfer.
In exceptional circumstances, the Study Board study can grant exemption from those parts of the curriculum that are not stipulated by law or ministerial order. Exemption regarding an examination applies to the immediate examination.
The rules for examinations are stated in the Examination Policies and Procedures published by the faculty on their website.
In the assessment of all written work, regardless of the language it is written in, weight is also given to the student's formulation and spelling ability, in addition to the academic content. Orthographic and grammatical correctness as well as stylistic proficiency are taken as a basis for the evaluation of language performance. Language performance must always be included as an independent dimension of the total evaluation. However, no examination can be assessed as ‘Pass’ on the basis of good language performance alone; similarly, an examination normally cannot be assessed as ‘Fail’ on the basis of poor language performance alone.
The Study Board can grant exemption from this in special cases (e.g., dyslexia or a native language other than Danish).
The Master’s Thesis must include an English summary (or another foreign language: French, Spanish or German upon approval by the Study Board). If the project is written in English, the summary must be in Danish (The Study Board can grant exemption from this). The summary must be at least 1 page and not more than 2 pages (this is not included in any fixed minimum and maximum number of pages per student). The summary is included in the evaluation of the project as a whole.
At programs that are taught in Danish, it is assumed that the student can read academic texts in modern Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and English and use reference works, etc., in other European languages. At programs taught in English, it is assumed that the student can read academic text and use reference works, etc., in English.
The following competence profile will appear on the diploma:
A Candidatus graduate has the following competency profile:
A Candidatus graduate has competencies that have been acquired via a course of study that has taken place in a research environment.
A Candidatus graduate is qualified for employment on the labour market based on his or her academic discipline as well as for further research (PhD programmes). A Candidatus graduate has, compared to a Bachelor, developed his or her academic knowledge and independence so as to be able to apply scientific theory and method on an independent basis within both an academic and a professional context.
Knowledge
• are well-oriented in the foundations of key mathematical-economics disciplines including econometrics, stochastic processes, quantitative finance, operations research.
Skills
• are able to independently identify, formulate, and analyse mathematical-economics problems employing theory and methodology from the mathematical and quantitative economics sciences
• are able to independently choose relevant methods and tools from various mathematical and quantitative economics areas and to motivate this choice
• are able to disseminate scientific knowledge and to discuss applications of methods from the mathematical and quantitative economics sciences
• are able to choose relevant mathematical theories to problems that originate in, for example economics, to develop them and to make use of them in the original applied context
Competencies
• are able to ponder about central mathematical and quantitative economics insights, methods and tools and to identify problems amenable to mathematical treatment
• are able to manage complex work and development scenarios that may require new strategies in order to make progress
• are able to independently take responsibility for professional development and specialization
The program is structured in modules and organized as a problem-based study. A module is a program element or a group of program elements, which aims to give students a set of professional skills within a fixed time frame specified in ECTS credits, and concluding with one or more examinations within specific exam periods. Examinations are defined in the curriculum. The program is based on a combination of academic, problem-oriented and interdisciplinary approaches and organized based on the following work and evaluation methods that combine skills and reflection:
• lectures
• classroom instruction
• project work
• workshops
• exercises (individually and in groups)
• teacher feedback
• reflection
• portfolio work
The study board can cancel modules if the number of enrolled students is low.
All modules are assessed through individual grading according to the 7-point scale or Pass/Fail. All modules are assessed by external examination (external grading) or internal examination (internal grading or by assessment by the supervisor only).
Only a limited number of elective courses will be offered at each semester.
Students can only participate once in a course with a given title.
Offered as:
1-professional | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation method | Assessment method |
1 Semester
| |||||
MATØK7, projects | Project | 15 | |||
MATØK7, elective courses | 15 | ||||
2 Semester
| |||||
MATØK8, projects | Project | 15 | |||
MATØK8, elective courses | 15 | ||||
3 Semester
| |||||
Advanced Topics with Applications | Project | 20 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Oral exam based on a project |
MATØK9, elective courses | 10 | ||||
3-4 Semester
| |||||
Long Master’s Thesis. 60 ECTS | Project | 60 | 7-point grading scale | External examination | Oral exam based on a project |
4 Semester
| |||||
Master’s Thesis, 30 ECTS | Project | 30 | 7-point grading scale | External examination | Master's thesis/final project |
The student has the possibility to write a Long Master’s Thesis (in the 3'rd and 4'th semesters: 60 ECTS), if the thesis is of experimental character. The amount of experimental work must reflect the allotted ECTS.
MATØK7, projects | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation Method | Assessment method |
Empirical Financial Modelling and Applied Econometrics | Project | 15 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Oral exam based on a project |
Operations Research. Project | Project | 15 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Oral exam based on a project |
MATØK7, elective courses | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation Method | Assessment method |
Financial Econometrics and Quantitative Methods in Finance | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Measure Theory and Stochastic Processes | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Numerical Analysis | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Oral exam |
Topics in Operations Research | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Advanced Operations Management | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Flexible Manufacturing | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
MATØK8, projects | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation Method | Assessment method |
In-depth Study of Financial Engineering | Project | 15 | 7-point grading scale | External examination | Oral exam based on a project |
Supply Chain Operations and Analysis | Project | 15 | 7-point grading scale | External examination | Oral exam based on a project |
MATØK8, elective courses | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation Method | Assessment method |
Quantitative Finance and Computational Statistics | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Continuous Time Finance | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Data Mining | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Manufacturing and Supply Chain Systems | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Business Intelligence and Analytics | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
MATØK9, elective courses | |||||
Module name | Course type | ECTS | Applied grading scale | Evaluation Method | Assessment method |
Topics in Statistical Sciences I | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Topics in Statistical Science II | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Statistics for Duration Data | Course | 5 | Passed/Not Passed | Internal examination | Active participation/continuous evaluation |
Flexible Manufacturing | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Topics in Operations Research | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
Advanced Operations Management | Course | 5 | 7-point grading scale | Internal examination | Written or oral exam |
All students who have not participated in Aalborg University’s PBL introductory course during their Bachelor’s degree must attend the introductory course “Problem-based Learning and Project Management”. The introductory course must be approved before the student can participate in the project exam. For further information, please see the School of Engineering and Science’ website.