Haas and IEOR Classes as Non-Major

<p>I'm very much into the whole well-rounded "liberal arts" idea of education, and there are so many classes I want to take but only limited time.</p>

<p>For a while I was considering doubling Haas (if I get in) with CS (not EECS), but there are so many requirements for Haas that I would not be able to take any classes outside of CS + Haas. Plus, many of the Haas requirements seem useless.</p>

<p>There are about 5 or so Haas and IEOR classes that I do find interesting, though. Just to name a few: UGBA 105 Intro to Organization Behavior, 106 Intro to Marketing, 195 Entrepreneurship, IEOR 190H Global Innovation.</p>

<p>How hard is it to get into these types of classes as a non-major (meaning I will have last priority), especially upper-division classes that I listed?
Am I probably only going to be able to take these classes as a junior/senior?</p>

<p>You can watch the schedule of classes over each semester to see how full the classes tend to get.</p>

<p>You’ll have to waitlist at first but you shouldn’t have any problems getting into UGBA 105 and 106. Your chances will be much better as an upperclassman but if there’s room in your schedule it wouldn’t hurt try once you reach sophomore status.</p>

<p>Some of the classes (especially the IEOR190 series) is pointless if you take it early. I even found regretting myself taking this UGBA class in junior year instead of senior year.</p>

<p>^Hm… why is that the case?</p>

<p>Suppose you learn about 401k as a freshman, are you gonna make an account right away and start saving even though you have no full-time job for at least another 3 years?</p>

<p>A student might get an internship or summer job somewhere and observe how the organization behaves in comparison to what s/he may have learned in Business Administration 105.</p>

<p>Sociology 116 may be of interest to some of the students who would be interested in Business Administration 105.</p>