Haas Auditing Policy

Auditing of Undergraduate Business courses is not allowed.

Time Conflict

Time Conflict overrides are not be permitted. Students hoping to enroll in two conflicting courses must select one course. This applies to all Business Administration courses, regardless of course modality (online-asynchronous) or if course attendance is taken.

Course Enrollment Information

On a space available basis, the Undergraduate Program Office enrolls Haas majors first in Business courses, regardless of wait list position, followed by non-Haas students starting from the top of the wait list. All waitlisted students are strongly advised to have a back-up course. Priority for enrollment in undergraduate Business courses is as follows:

Phase 1

Enrollment into most UGBA courses will be restricted to students in the Business Administration major with 5 or more terms of attendance. The Undergraduate Program Office recommends that all other eligible students wait list themselves during Phase I.

Phase 2

Enrollment into most UGBA courses will continue to be restricted to students in the Business Administration major with 5 or more terms of attendance for the first two weeks.

After two weeks, students on the waitlist will be admitted into the course:

  1. Business Administration majors with 5 or more terms of attendance
  2. Non-Business Administration majors with 5 or more terms of attendance
  3. (In Select-Courses) Business Administration Second Year students
  4. Concurrent Enrollment students
  5. Graduate Students

Adjustment Period:

When the Adjustment Period begins, students will be ushered into the course from the waitlist based on available space.

Instructor Drop

Any student not meeting listed prerequisites for Business courses or not attending in the first three weeks of instruction may be “Instructor Dropped” from the class list or wait list.

Select-Courses for Second Year Business Administration Students

Our team has curated a specialized list of upper division courses for second year Business Administration students to consider for enrollment. In the courses listed below, second year students in the Business Administration major will be admitted into the course if they are on the waitlist during Phase 2. Second Year students on the waitlist for upper-division UGBA courses not listed below will not be enrolled into those courses until the start of the adjustment period.

Course Title Notes
UGBA 101A MicroEconomic Analysis for Business Decisions Strongly recommended that students have completed Econ 1 or Econ 2
UGBA 101B MacroEconomic Analysis for Business Decisions Strongly recommended that students have completed Econ 1 or Econ 2
UGBA 102A Financial Accounting Strongly recommended that students have completed the lower division math requirements
UGBA 107 The Social, Political, and Ethical Environment of Business
UGBA 135 Personal Financial Management
UGBA C196C Berkeley ChangeMaker Crosslisted with UGBA C12 | Recommended to register for UGBA C196C to earn units towards elective requirements
UGBA 198 DeCal Courses (Updated every semester) Enrollment for these courses will not be released to anyone until the adjustment period.

Upper Division Courses for First Year, First Semester Students

All First year, first semester students will be prohibited from enrolling in Upper Division Business courses. Below is a list of courses for Fall 2025 that are open for first year students:

  • UGBA 135

Enforced Prerequisite Classes for Spring 2026

All students WISHING TO TAKE THE COURSES BELOW should have completed or have in progress the enforced prerequisites before Spring 2026. If a student will not have the prerequisite completed by the beginning of Spring 2026, then the student will be dropped from the class list. See more details in the Class Notes section on classes.berkeley.edu

Class Prerequisite Course Number
UGBA 102B UGBA 102A (can be taken concurrently with UGBA 102B)
UGBA 167.1 UGBA 106

Lower division versions of the prerequisite will not be allowed. *All community college classes are considered lower division and will not satisfy the enforced prerequisites.*

NEW DEADLINE 

Students are allowed to add and drop classes up to 11:59pm on Wednesday of the fourth week of classes.

The Undergraduate Program finalizes enrollment on Friday of the fourth week of classes. Students should check their enrollment in business classes on CalCentral on Friday by 11:59pm. If they have not been enrolled in a course by that time, they should NOT continue to attend as they will not be added to the class.

Professors and GSIs CANNOT enroll students in Business Administration/UGBA courses.

Auditing of Undergraduate Business courses is not allowed.

 

Concurrent Enrollment

Berkeley Courses for Non-Berkeley Students

Students at other colleges, UC employees, and others, can take UC Berkeley courses through UC Berkeley Extension’s Concurrent Enrollment program. This program allows you, for a fee, to participate fully in a Berkeley class, have homework and exams graded, and receive an official course grade. If you wish to take a Haas undergraduate course from the list below through the Concurrent Enrollment Program, please see UC Berkeley Extension’s website to complete an application.

Requirements for admission to a course as a Concurrent Enrollment student are below:

  • The course does not have a wait list of current UC Berkeley students.
  • The course is not over-enrolled.
  • The prerequisite for the course is not being enforced. See the notes section at: https://classes.berkeley.edu/
  • The course is NOT open to current UC Berkeley Business majors ONLY.
  • The Professor teaching the course has given their consent for concurrent enrollment.

Please see below for the list of Haas Undergraduate Program courses that are currently open to concurrent enrollment students. Haas Undergraduate Program courses that are not on this list are not open to concurrent enrollment students. Concurrent enrollment applications submitted for UGBA courses that are not on the list below will be denied. Visiting students participating in the Berkeley Haas Global Access Program (BHGAP) will have priority in registering for the following courses. Although faculty may recommend a student for a course, the final decision is made by the Haas Undergraduate Program Office. Haas Undergraduate Faculty do not control enrollment in undergraduate business courses.

Be advised that the list below is subject to change. There is no guarantee of enrollment in any of these courses. We highly recommend you have back-up courses in case you do not get in your desired UGBA class(es).

If you have a question regarding Concurrent Enrollment you may email [email protected]


List of Open Courses for Fall 2025

Updated 8.7.25

Class Title Lecture Professor Class Number
UGBA101A Microeconomic Analysis for Business Decision 1 TBA 19971
UGBA101A Microeconomic Analysis for Business Decision 2 TBA 19972
UGBA 101B Macroeconomic Analysis for Business Decisions 1 Don Hanna 20030
UGBA 102A Financial Accounting 2 Noga Abraham 20005
UGBA 102B Managerial Accounting 1 John Briginshaw 20026
UGBA 102B Managerial Accounting 2 John Briginshaw 20158
UGBA 103 Introduction to Finance 1 Stephen Etter 19996
UGBA 175 Legal Aspects 1 Alan Ross 20001
UGBA 176
(BHGAP Only)
Innovations in Communication 1 Diane Dwyer 20057
UGBA 177 Markets, Firms and Environmental Sustainability 1 Kelsey Jack 19995
UGBA 177 AI and the Future of Business 2 Olaf Groth 20162
UGBA 178
(BHGAP Only)
Introduction to International Business 1 Daniel Himelstein 19985
UGBA 179
(BHGAP Only)
International Consulting 1 Daniel Himelstein 19983
UGBA 190D
(BHGAP Only)
Innovation & Design 1 Mariana Somma 20293
UGBA 190T Design Your Life 1 Elizabeth Kovats 16702
UGBA 190T Solving Family Business Growth Challenges 2 Rhonda Shrader 16704
UGBA 190T Teaming for Change 4 Chelsea Gregory & William Collins 16703
UGBA 190T Strategy for the Networked Economy 6 Jon Metzler 16706
UGBA 190T Creativity Lab 7 Mariana Somma 16707
UGBA 191L Communications 1 Ingrid Gavshon & Suzanne Houlihan 20294
UGBA 192A Leading NP and Social Enterprises 1 Joe Dougherty 33595
UGBA 192E
(BHGAP Only)
Social Entrepreneurship 1 TBA 20185
UGBA 192P
(BHGAP Only)
Sustainable Business Consulting 1 Deborah Krackeler & Glen Low 20165
UGBA 192T Business Models and Strategies for a Better World 3 David Rochlin 19080
UGBA 192T
(BHGAP Only)
Responsible AI Innovation and Management 5 Genevieve Smith 19081

Academic Integrity

The following is the Haas School of Business’ policy as it relates to Academic Integrity:

1. To ensure that campus has a formal record, a faculty member will report any incident of academic dishonesty to the appropriate degree program office.

2. In resolving the incident, the degree program office will serve as a guide in dealing the student(s), faculty and the Center for Student Conduct.

3. In cases of blatant academic dishonesty (as defined below), the presumption will be that the faculty member will assign to the student a final course grade of “F” and recommend to the CSCCS a one-semester suspension. Blatant academic dishonesty includes (but is not limited to):

3a. Arranging for another student to take an exam, or taking another student’s exam,

3b. Plagiarism consisting of inclusion without proper citation of more than 50 words composed by someone else,

3c. Submitting an exam answer that is virtually verbatim to that of another student, or willfully allowing other students to copy one’s own exam answers,

3d. Communicating with another student or using a resource (e.g., the internet) during the taking of an in-class or take-home exam, where the instructor has explicitly stated in writing that such communication or resource usage is impermissible.

Based on the specific circumstances of any particular incident, the faculty member retains the right to assign a final grade higher than an “F” and/or recommend to the CSCCS a sanction that is less or more severe than one-semester suspension. In any case, the CSCCS retains final authority to determine a student’s actual academic sanction(s), as per campus policy.

4. Note: Courses for which academic dishonesty has been verified by established campus procedures cannot be dropped from the record, nor can the grading option be changed. If a student drops a course in which academic dishonesty has been verified, the course will be reinstated and the grade will be posted to the student’s record. If a student changes the grading option in a course in which academic dishonesty has been verified, the the grading option will be reverted to the grading option on record at the time of the incident of misconduct and the grade will be posted to the student’s record.

5. At the beginning of each academic year, the Senior Assistant Dean for Instruction (SADI) will send an email to all students that stresses the importance of academic integrity, provides a link to a website with clear definition and examples of plagiarism, and emphasizes the Haas School’s policy regarding academic dishonesty.