Degrees of Difficulty

<p>Hrmm, I’ve only been here for a semester so take this with a grain of salt:</p>

<p>Firstly, in terms of sheer workload/difficulty, its generally accepted that M&T is first. Engineering has a brutal workload and the wharton curve can get really killer. </p>

<p>LSM would probably be just under that and Huntsman would follow, since the language classes are significantly easier than hard sciences. </p>

<p>When it comes to wharton only, the degree of difficulty can really matter. There are some upper level finance courses in which you’d be breaking records with an 80% whereas in core classes, something like 95 might net you a B. The core classes are generally not very difficult but you’re expected to get near perfect on many of them since all core classes are curved. The really difficult courses are usually smaller and aren’t curved but you’re not required to do them of course, so really the difficulty of wharton is up to you. </p>

<p>In terms of single degrees, engineering is definitely the most work although not curved as insanely as wharton core, although still more than CAS.</p>

<p>The college is probably easiest difficulty wise, only very popular majors are curved and then only some of the classes. Lots of freedom to explore and you might end up actually learning more, although the experience is not as rigorous as some other programs.</p>