Semester-by-semester courses, IGETC requirements, and major prerequisites — verified from real articulation data.
From
Diablo Valley College
To
UCLA
Business AdministrationUCLA requires a 3.0 GPA minimum to apply, but the middle 50% of admitted transfer students came in between 3.77 and 4.0 — and Business Economics is specifically flagged by UCLA as a highly selective major where the bar is even higher than campus average. Your grades in MATH 192, MATH 193, ECON 201, and ECON 203 will be scrutinized most closely, because they directly map to the pre-major courses UCLA evaluates. A 3.5 overall GPA won't be enough if you're pulling B's in those core classes.
Diablo Valley College is a UCLA Transfer Alliance Program (TAP) member, which means you have access to a real admissions advantage — but only if you act on it early. Enroll in DVC's Honors Program as soon as possible, complete the honors coursework requirements, and get certified by your honors counselor before you submit your UC application. TAP gives you priority consideration for Business Economics (a College of Letters and Science major) and a second shot at admission through an alternate major if your first choice doesn't come through.
Major Requirements
Business Economics (College of Letters and Science B.A.) at UCLA
Courses at Diablo Valley College that satisfy UCLA's Business Administration major preparation, verified via ASSIST.org.
Business Economics is housed in the UCLA Department of Economics — not the Anderson School of Management, which has no undergraduate degree program. Students also frequently confuse it with the straight Economics B.A. (also in L&S), which has less management coursework and is more theoretically focused. Business Economics specifically requires Management courses from the Anderson School alongside economics core courses, making it more applied and business-oriented than Economics.
| Course at Diablo Valley College | Satisfies at UCLA | Units |
|---|---|---|
| MATH 192 — Calculus I | MATH 31A — Differential Calculus | 4 |
| MATH 193 — Calculus II | MATH 31B — Integral Calculus | 4 |
| ECON 201 — Principles of Microeconomics | ECON 1 — Principles of Economics I (Micro) | 3 |
| ECON 202 — Principles of Macroeconomics | ECON 2 — Principles of Economics II (Macro) | 3 |
| ECON 203 — Intermediate Microeconomics | ECON 11 — Introduction to Mathematical Economics | 3 |
| MATH 120 — Introduction to Probability and Statistics | ECON 41 — Statistics for Economists | 4 |
| BUS 211 — Financial Accounting | MGMT 1A — Financial Accounting | 3 |
General Education
Complete these five courses at Diablo Valley College to start your UCLA GE pattern. Finishing full IGETC/Cal-GETC at the CC is ideal — these five give you the broadest head start, and CCN-tagged courses stay portable if you switch community colleges.
ANTHR 115
Primate Evolution and Adaptation
CHEM 107
Integrated Inorganic, Organic, and Biological Chemistry
HIST 120
History of the United States before 1865
ENGL C1000
Academic Reading and Writing
ENGL C1001
Critical Thinking and Writing
| Area | Course at Diablo Valley College | Units |
|---|---|---|
Life Science | ANTHR 115 — Primate Evolution and Adaptation | 3 |
Physical Science | CHEM 107 — Integrated Inorganic, Organic, and Biological Chemistry | 5 |
Humanities | HIST 120 — History of the United States before 1865 | 3 |
English CompositionCCN | ENGL C1000 — Academic Reading and Writing | 3 |
Critical ThinkingCCN | ENGL C1001 — Critical Thinking and Writing | 3 |
MATH 192 → MATH 193 (Calculus I → Calculus II)
Calculus I must be completed before you can enroll in Calculus II at DVC, and both courses are required for transfer prep — if you don't begin MATH 192 in your first semester, you risk arriving at UCLA missing a core pre-major requirement for Business Economics.
UCLA runs on quarters — Diablo Valley College runs on semesters
DVC's semester system means your two calculus courses take a full academic year to complete, so map out your entire two-year sequence from day one — there's no winter quarter to catch up in.
Preview
A preview of what Pipeline generates — exact courses, in the right order, every semester.
Watch Out
MATH 192 (Calculus I) and MATH 193 (Calculus II) need to be done before you transfer, and they're a two-semester chain at DVC — you can't take both in the same term. If you don't start MATH 192 in your first semester at DVC, you'll almost certainly be missing at least one calculus course when you apply, which is a critical gap for Business Economics. Waiting even one semester can derail your entire timeline.
DVC participates in the UCLA Transfer Alliance Program, which gives certified students priority consideration for admission to College of Letters and Science majors — Business Economics is one of them. The catch is you have to be enrolled in DVC's Honors Program from early on; you can't retroactively earn the honors coursework in your final semester. Talk to a DVC honors counselor before your second semester.
A lot of students apply to 'Business Administration' or 'Business Economics' expecting a traditional B-school experience, but UCLA's Business Economics B.A. lives in the College of Letters and Science — not the Anderson School of Management, which doesn't offer an undergraduate degree at all. The major is rigorous and economics-heavy, with courses like ECON 203 (Intermediate Microeconomics) at DVC forming the foundation. Make sure this is the program you actually want before building your entire plan around it.
FAQ
Business Economics is one of the majors UCLA explicitly flags as highly selective in its Transfer Admission Guide — meaning demand significantly exceeds available spots. The campus-wide transfer admit rate for fall 2024 was 22.3%, and Business Economics applicants are competing against a pool where the median admitted GPA was 3.9. Completing all pre-major courses at DVC — including MATH 192, MATH 193, ECON 201, ECON 202, ECON 203, MATH 120, and BUS 211 — with strong grades is your single biggest lever.
The core lower-division prep courses you need to complete at DVC are MATH 192 (Calculus I), MATH 193 (Calculus II), ECON 201 (Principles of Microeconomics), ECON 202 (Principles of Macroeconomics), ECON 203 (Intermediate Microeconomics), MATH 120 (Introduction to Probability and Statistics), and BUS 211 (Financial Accounting). These map directly to the UCLA pre-major requirements via ASSIST articulation agreements. Start with MATH 192 and ECON 201 your first semester — they're each the first step in separate prerequisite chains.
Yes — DVC is a participating TAP member college, so you can access priority consideration for Business Economics (a College of Letters and Science major) by completing DVC's Honors Program and getting TAP-certified. One major benefit is the ability to list an approved alternate major on your application, giving you a second chance at UCLA admission if Business Economics doesn't come through. You need to enroll in the Honors Program early — it's not something you can complete at the last minute.
IGETC is accepted for Business Economics at UCLA and can save you significant time on general education requirements after you transfer. That said, UCLA's own guidance makes clear that major prep takes priority over IGETC — if you have to choose between finishing ECON 203 or completing one last IGETC elective, finish the major prep course. Ideally, you'll complete both, but your GPA in courses like MATH 192 and ECON 201 matters more to the admissions evaluator than whether your IGETC is 100% done.
UCLA's published minimum is 3.0, but that number is essentially a floor for eligibility — not a competitive GPA. Admitted transfer students campus-wide had a mid-50th percentile GPA range of 3.77–4.0, and Business Economics is one of the more selective majors on campus. Aim for a 3.7 or higher across all transferable coursework, and prioritize earning A's specifically in MATH 192, MATH 193, ECON 201, and ECON 203 — those are the courses directly tied to your major preparation evaluation.
Explore More
Planning a transfer from Diablo Valley College (DVC) to UCLA for Business Economics takes more advance work than most students expect — and the students who get in are the ones who started mapping their course sequence before they even completed their first semester at DVC. The UCLA Business Economics B.A. lives in the College of Letters and Science, not the Anderson School of Management, and it demands a rigorous set of lower-division major prerequisites that need to be completed at the community college level before you even apply. Based on ASSIST.org articulation agreements for the DVC-to-UCLA pathway, those courses include MATH 192 (Calculus I), MATH 193 (Calculus II), ECON 201 (Principles of Microeconomics), ECON 202 (Principles of Macroeconomics), ECON 203 (Intermediate Microeconomics), MATH 120 (Introduction to Probability and Statistics), and BUS 211 (Financial Accounting). Because MATH 192 is a prerequisite for MATH 193, and DVC runs on semesters, you have to start your calculus sequence immediately — there's no room to delay. The campus-wide UCLA transfer admit rate for fall 2024 was 22.3% across 27,167 applicants, and Business Economics is flagged in UCLA's Transfer Admission Guide as a highly selective major, meaning the effective bar is even higher. Admitted transfers had a mid-50th percentile GPA of 3.77–4.0. Completing IGETC is accepted for this major and can ease your general education burden after transfer, but UCLA's own counselors are clear that major prerequisites come first. DVC students also have access to the UCLA Transfer Alliance Program (TAP), which offers priority consideration for College of Letters and Science majors when students complete DVC's Honors Program and earn TAP certification. Transfer planning tools like Pipeline help students build a personalized, semester-by-semester course plan that accounts for prerequisite chains, IGETC completion, and TAP certification deadlines — all in one place.
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