Business+Engineering Dual Degree

<p>Hi,</p>

<p>I am seeking a dual degree in both engineering and business. However, I am having trouble finding many top colleges that offer this setup.</p>

<p>I have done a fair bit of research, and this is the list I have come up with. Does anyone know of any other schools that offer this dual degree?</p>

<p>Emory/Gtech Program
Michigan
UC Berkeley
UT Austin
UIUC
UPenn
Lehigh</p>

<p>Any other colleges that offer this? All help is greatly appreciated!</p>

<p>It’s tough to double major in biz and engineering. </p>

<p>Berkeley doesn’t offer a dual-degree in biz/engineering. However, ambitious/talented students have been known to double major.</p>

<p>My suggestion:
Focus on getting a BS in engineering while taking some econ/biz electives.
Work for a couple years…figure out what path you want to take career-wise.
Go back for an MBA (your employer may help pay for it).</p>

<p>At Northwestern, you can do something like this:
Industrial Engineering & Management Sciences + Kellogg Certificate
[Certificate</a> Program for Undergraduates - Kellogg School of Management - Northwestern University](<a href=“http://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/Certificate.aspx]Certificate”>Certificate Program for Undergraduates | Kellogg School of Management)</p>

<p>I visited Michigan State a few days ago and, yes, it isn’t the most prestigious school, but if you can get into the honors program (30 ACT, top 5% of class, or close to those marks) you can double major in just about anything because you can lay out your own set of courses from all graduate and undergraduate classes. At the honors presentation, the presenter told us that they recently had a graduate who quadruple-majored in 5 years. </p>

<p>If this seems interesting to you, look more into it here:
[MSU</a> Honors College - Home](<a href=“MSU Honors College”>MSU Honors College)</p>

<p>The reason you want to do this is?</p>

<p>Why not just major in engineering and take a few selected business courses of interest?</p>

<p>Or perhaps industrial engineering, which includes a quantitative viewpoint over some types of business decisions?</p>

<p>

This is another good option.</p>