<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (all subjects combined):</p>
<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (individual subjects): </p>
<p>Go ahead put down your opinions</p>
<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (all subjects combined):</p>
<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (individual subjects): </p>
<p>Go ahead put down your opinions</p>
<p>Stanford and MIT.</p>
<p>Stanford is top 10 in all four subjects you listed (arguably #1 in CS), but only three of them can be pursued at the undergraduate level; business is the one you can't.</p>
<p>Thus, for all four, I'd say Berkeley and MIT. If you forget business, add Stanford, Princeton, Harvard, UCLA, Yale, Chicago, Cornell, Michigan.</p>
<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (all subjects combined): Stanford</p>
<p>best undergraduate school for computer science/math/buisness/economics (individual subjects): </p>
<p>CS: Carnegie Mellon University
Math: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Business: University of Pennsylvania, Wharton
Economics: University of Chicago, Princeton University, etc.</p>
<p>How can Stanford be best undergraduate school for business when you can't even major in it?</p>
<p>For CS, CMU at number one? Really? This year, US news ranked it #4, behind Stanford, Berkeley, and MIT. I'd easily put one of those ahead of CMU, though CMU is obviously one of the best.</p>
<p>If U Chicago, Princeton, etc. can be mentioned for economics, then other schools for math (Princeton, Harvard, Berkeley, etc.) should be mentioned as well.</p>
<p>Cornell University</p>