Dual-degree course requirements? (Wharton + SEAS, but not M&T)

<p>I know for M&T and Huntsman, they trim the courseload a bit - combine a few classes between the schools, throw a few electives/“breadth” classes out, etc… With College + Wharton dual-degrees, they do some of that, too: reducing the College electives requirement from 16 to 14. For Wharton + SEAS (a “generic” dual degree, not M&T), I’d asume there’d also be at least some sort of reduction. Anyone here know how much and where?</p>

<p>Just to make sure, are the requirements to get into Wharton in terms of coursework Econ-001, Econ-002, and Math-104 (Placed out with BC calc)?</p>

<p>For the end of freshman year, yes. But if you apply any later for dual degree, additional requirements apply. </p>

<p><a href="http://undergrad.wharton.upenn.edu/dualdegree/internal_transfers.cfm%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://undergrad.wharton.upenn.edu/dualdegree/internal_transfers.cfm&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>Unfortunately, to do a dual degree with SEAS and Wharton, there are no reductions in the classes you need. Most will double count if you plan them right.. If planned perfectly, you can usually get it down to about 46-48 credits (note a regular SEAS degree is 40 credits..), maybe less depending on your major. </p>

<p>hope this helps a bit :)</p>

<p>For a BAS? I've been playing around with the requirements for a BSE (in CSE) on a spreadsheet here, and even doing an OPIM concentration at Wharton (which double-counts perfectly, since a lot of the OPIMs are ESE cross-listed), I can't figure any combination below the lower 50's. Which is a hell of a lot of courses...</p>

<p>Seems there is some flexibility, in an individualized manner. At least that's the gist I gather from here:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.seas.upenn.edu/ugrad/dual_degrees.html%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://www.seas.upenn.edu/ugrad/dual_degrees.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>"A student desiring to pursue a dual degree program must develop a study plan with the aid of an academic advisor in the School of Engineering and Applied Science and an advisor in the school which will grant the second degree. Such an individualized program requires a minimum of 40 c. u. with the BAS degree (46 cu with the 40 cu BAS degree) or 46 c.u. with the BSE degree"</p>

<p>Meh, guess I'll wait until I'm more serious about it and then I'll bug an advisor. :)</p>