The College and Wharton

<p>if you get into the School of Arts and Sciences can you take business courses at Wharton and vice versa?</p>

<p>You can take courses in the schools you are not enrolled in.....SEAS, Wharton etc. There is a limited number of hours but you also have the option of a dual degree......a degree from SAS and Wharton.</p>

<p>Just remember that in order to get a dual degree from Wharton if you are in the College, you must still apply to and be accepted by Wharton.</p>

<p>I am not dual-degree and I have no intention of dual-degree. I am in the College, but I still find a lot of Wharton courses interesting, and even without a degree they still go in the 'relevant coursework' part of my resume, and of course have great benefit for me.</p>

<p>Be sure to take negotiations.</p>

<p>PENN
like. no. other. (sorry, Sony)</p>

<p>To (possibly?) clarify what Hazmat said - There is a limit to the number of courses you can take outside your home school that you can count towards your elective credits, but I think you can take as many classes outside your home school as you like, you just won't be able to use them to count towards your graduation credits.</p>

<p>Non-College Courses</p>

<p>You are permitted to count courses taken outside the College as free electives as long as you take at least sixteen of your electives in the College (fourteen for dual degree students). Any non-College courses that are included in the General Requirement are considered College electives.</p>

<p>The following count as college courses. Credit given by College departments:
- A.P. credits
- Transfer credits given by College departments
- CGS courses (but not Wharton Evening courses)</p>

<p>Courses from the following schools are non-College:
- Engineering
- Wharton (The College does not give credit for Wharton evening classes)
- Nursing
- Design
- Graduate School of Education
- Law
- Social Policy and Practice</p>

<p>In addition, transfer credits given by non-College departments are considered non-College courses and thus count against the four credits allowed.</p>

<p>The College does not give any credit for Wharton Evening, ROTC or Preceptorial courses.</p>