<p>Hi guys! I have a couple of questions. How is Cornell's program compared to Wharton? NYU Stern? (strictly education wise and grad school opportunities, I am aware of the different environments) Also, is AEM all business? Or does agriculture find its way into a lot of classes? Lastly, I noticed on Cornell's website that they like kids who show an interest in Agriculture for CALS. Does this hold true for AEM applicants? Thanks guys!</p>
<p>go for Wharton if you’re going to do business, no contest</p>
<p>i don’t think it’s possible to pursue a dual degree between aem and agricultural sciences</p>
<p>Dyson (AEM) beat Wharton this year.
[Best</a> Undergraduate Business Schools 2012 - Notre Dame No. 1 for Third Consecutive Year - Businessweek](<a href=“http://images.businessweek.com/slideshows/2012-03-20/best-undergraduate-business-schools-2012#slide4]Best”>http://images.businessweek.com/slideshows/2012-03-20/best-undergraduate-business-schools-2012#slide4)</p>
<p>AEM is definitely ranked higher and Agriculture can find its way if you want it to. Literally there are separate classes like Agriculture business but you can do only business classes. That’s what I’m doing because I am completely not interested in agriculture. There are concentrations like finance, management, accounting, etc so clearly no agriculture. That being said, they don’t care at all when you apply about agriculture. I had no interest in agriculture, never mentioned it in my application, never did anything related to it, and I was clearly fine.</p>