4 Yr Graduation Rate for Business Students

<p>What is the 4 yr graduation rate for Business students and how is class availability?
I heard business students have no problem graduating in 4 years, but I want someone to confirm it.
I also want to know the rate for Comp Sci students. </p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>EDIT: this is a huge factor becuause i will be paying OOS tuition and I do NOT want to pay for a 5th.
Thanks again :D</p>

<p>I don’t think you’ll have trouble. I’m graduating from Foster after three years of college, and that’s as a transfer student (I didn’t get admitted to Foster until WIN 2012 and I’m graduating during SPR 2013.) I didn’t have time to specialize, but that’s because I only did three years; you should have plenty of time to specialize and perhaps even double major if you spend four years there.</p>

<p>I’ve never had problems getting into classes, unless they were for a specific specialization. But if you have that specialization, you should have no trouble getting in. It shouldn’t delay your graduation at all.</p>

<p>So if I were to get in junior year, I wont have a problem graduating in 4 years?
Thanks for the info! Definitely uplifting :slight_smile: Anyone else have input?</p>

<p>Definitely should be fine … just be proactive in getting into the classes you need to graduate. That’s the biggest complaint I’ve heard across UW - “I can’t get into my classes so I can’t graduate in 4 years” - but from most of these students, they don’t actively check enrollment or talk to the professors/lecturers for add codes, try to overload, etc…</p>

<p>edit: s/flow/load</p>

<p>It shouldn’t be a problem. Certain sections do fill up in several seconds, but I just keep several different schedules to use in case one of the classes I want in my original schedule isn’t available.
You shouldn’t have a problem graduating on time.
However, if you are in accounting it MIGHT be a problem. First of all, you will have to take 4 classes per quarter to graduate on time (accounting has 36 credits besides core classes, no other major in BS has it). Second, if you choose to sit for the CPA exam, you will have to get the 225 credits somewhere, and you might get the extra at Foster (unless you want and you do get into the masters program)</p>

<p>What if I were to take some credits from comm college in California?
Are they still transferable?</p>

<p>For what purpose?</p>

<p>For transfer purposes - up to 90 100-200 lvl. classes are transferable. You can’t go beyond that unless you get an approval. However, 300 lvl classes can still be transferable if you have more than 90.</p>

<p>For the CPA exam - the classes just have to be college-level and even if they can’t be transferred they are still OK.</p>