<p>yes that is my question, especially for the internships they have posted on cornelltrak for the summer</p>
<p>yeah, that would be interesting to find out. They definitely do recruit here. they posted a bunch of different positions on CornellTrak. I applied to an internship with them that takes sophomores, but it is extremely competitive.</p>
<p>i'm sure they all are. i applied to the ones that take seniors-to-be. So if they post that there is one position available on cornelltrak, does that mean that they have reserved one position for a cornell student?</p>
<p>Not sure what you mean with 1 position available. are you looking at CornellTrak or InterviewTrak. the Latter is Cornell specific and they have interviews on campus and recruit directly, while the former has all hte stuff listed on monstertrak, plus some for Cornell.</p>
<p>so if InterviewTrak says only 1 position, it probably means that, but that would be a special case where a specific executive (sometimes aborad running the show) wants a Cornell student with him or her. I've seen this on cornelltrak but and on interviewtrak (Had something to do with Honk Kong).</p>
<p>also the people I met from JPMorgan at their presentation said they took 300 interns every year (20 juniors to be.) So there are lots of positions, and bunch are Cornellians.</p>
<p>Ibankers are divided into a bunch of smaller teams that specialize in industries. The executives in charge of the team (probably the ones who interview you) may be looking to fill only one spot in his team, but overall there are many spots.</p>
<p>its cornelltrak. i think you mixed up your latters and formers.</p>
<p>i don't think they take 300 interns from cornell. if you look at jobs listings after a job search on cornelltrak, the "positions available" says 1 in most cases. some research fellowships that i am applying to say they have 20 positions available on cornelltrak.</p>
<p>ex. bear sterns has many different job postings for a summer analyst (ibanking, imanagement, fixed income, asset management, etc.) with one position available with each, and goldman sachs has only one for a general summer analyst. im a little late in the job search so maybe there were more but that's what it says now.</p>
<p>nah, i didnt mix up the latter and former. InterviewTrak is Cornell Specific, stuff there are entered by our folks at Barnes hall. The items on InterviewTrak Usually have to do with resume drops followed by on campus interviews. CornellTrak has cornell stuff, but also has the general monster stuff.</p>
<p>and its definitely not 300 from Cornell. its 300 in its entirety. so the for the entire country/world.</p>
<p>Ahhh, I just got an interview with GS! I'm excited, do they give interviews to all that apply from here, or have I been pre-selected already?</p>
<p>Which degree is more valuable, a double major (BA in Comp Sci and Econ from CAS) versus a BS in AEM?</p>
<p>will cornell let you do a double major with maybe biological engineering and AEM?</p>
<p>will it take an internal transfer if you are in CoE and want to double major in AEM?</p>
<p>the double major in comp sci and Econ is obviously a lot better than just the BS in AEM.</p>
<p>and my roommate says he is actually working towards a Biologican and environmental engineering(BEE) and AEM degree, sooo I'm guessing it is possible.</p>
<p>in fact, If I was bright enough to handle Comp Sci and Econ, and still get a good GPA I would love to do it.</p>
<p>How hard is it to get a phd in finance or a juris doctor after graduation from aem or cas econ? I'm unsure whether i want to work or go to graduate school.</p>
<p>ZXCornell10, the only reason why I was wondering was because I wasn't sure if the BA in Comp Sci was seen on the same level as a BS in Comp Sci by employers.</p>
<p>I guess the better question to ask would a BA in Comp Sci AND a BA in Econ be better than a BS in Comp Sci (from CoE) and a Business Minor?</p>
I see this post is almost a decade old now. And I have come to have the same question as you @tomahawk89
I don’t think Dyson school is same as when you posted this thread, with an acceptance rate of 7% half of that of Cornell University. You probably graduated years ago. Could you tell me what you have chosen to do and how it worked out for you?