<p>I'm entering my third year, so I am a junior but I only have 59 hours which leaves me 1 credit hour short of officially being declared a junior. Today I registered for BA 324 and MAN 336 whose only pre-reqs listed are credit or registration for other classes, which i'm good on. It suddenly hit me that I might be dropped from BA 324 and MAN 336 for not having 60 hours yet, but nowhere did it mention having 60 hours and I was able to successfully add these classes. </p>
<p>So... I received two differing answers on this. I called the Undergraduate Programs Office and spoke to a peer advisor (these are other students) who said I needed 60 hours for MAN 336. He transferred me to the management department and the woman there looked at my account and said that I was fine because I met all the course pre-reqs for MAN 336 and that 60 hours is not required. </p>
<p>Has anyone here taken these classes without reaching 60 hours yet?</p>
<p>I had a friend take B A 324 without 60 hours, and several more are registering for it this fall. However, I believe MAN 336 requires 60 though. At least, that’s what I assumed from the way things have been explained to me.</p>
<p>Hmm… I should probably call again tomorrow and speak with an advisor since I keep hearing differing answers. I don’t know why the management department would tell me I was fine to take the class if I really wasn’t though. Maybe the peer advisor in the UPO thought I was referring to another MAN class.</p>
<p>Any class that is labeled as “upper division” requires 60 hours. This is what I have been told in the past, but every so often I seem to find more and more exceptions. B A 324 being the most major one. I’ve never not had 60 hours, so I never really cared to look into it very much.</p>
<p>I think 60+ hours is required if it says “upper division standing” as a pre-req.</p>
<p>Yeah I was looking at non-business upperdivision classes and their pre-req was “upper division standing.” I think i’m fine to take MAN 336 then because the pre-req system checked me as having met all requirements. </p>
<p>Xcellerator, I saw that too. No clue what those mean.</p>
<p>I called again today and they said the only requirement other than the course pre-reqs is having declared a major, but they are making exceptions for transfers. I won’t be dropped from the class.</p>
<p>Off topic, how do I create a McCombs email?</p>
<p>For some reason anytime I log in to any portion of the McCombs site, whether Mccombs Online Resources, or the petition for concurrent enrollment, and even the link you just posted, it says it doesn’t recognize me as a business student so i’m not allowed access. I emailed an advisor about this, but is this happening to anyone else?</p>
<p>Yeah I can’t claim the email either, but I think it’s because we can’t claim it until it’s the “official” fall semester, because in my summer 2010 RIS page, I’m still listed under my previous college.</p>
<p>Why Two Kay: Do you know if the business classes will be on waitlist later on? Right now they are not on waitlist but I checked last year’s course schedule and classes such as accounting, B A 324, etc. were on waitlist. One of my friend is trying to get into these classes but he has to keep checking for it to open up.</p>
<p>If the waitlist fills, it will show up as closed. If my suspicions are correct, a 30 person class will waitlist once enrollment hits 30, and appear “closed” when the waitlist is 30 people full. Basically, you can’t join a waitlist if the list already has the entire size of the class in it.</p>
<p>I’ve never dealt with waitlists before. I got in one class that was closed (did not have a waitlist) just by refreshing the page constantly waiting for a spot to open. I wish it always worked like that, I don’t like the idea of waitlists. If somebody puts in the dedication to refresh the page waiting for a class to open, he deserves it more IMHO.</p>
<p>My B A 324 class was about that size I think. My accounting was like 40-50, although I would say <30 on an average class day was in attendance. My MIS 301 class was like 60 maybe? But most days it was around 30.</p>
<p>Some classes like ECO 304K are massivehuge, like 400 people. But so many people have to take that for some sort of credit. That was the only class my fall semester with that many people. My sociology class had 100, but all the rest were much smaller than expected. CMS 306M was around 25 I think.</p>