<p>Does Stanford Have a 5-year BSE/MBA program?</p>
<p>I don't think so, but i could be wrong.</p>
<p>No, Stanford's Graduate School of Business does not offer a combined BSE/MBA 5-year degree. </p>
<p>However, the school of engineering offers a Masters degree in Management Science & Engineering that can be completed in one year. You may want to look at this program to see if it offers what you're looking for. There are options for coterminal degrees (BSE and Masters in this case).</p>
<p>Stanford doesn't have it. Northwestern does but it's very very difficult to get in. I heard somewhere only one spot was given each year. I could be wrong about that though. I did happen to meet this girl that was in it and, interestingly, she turned down Stanford for that. She majored in industrial engineering/management sciences (equivalent to Stanford's MSE).</p>
<p>
[quote]
Honors Program in Engineering and Management
If you are motivated, achievement oriented, and interested in a career in management, the Honors Program in Engineering and Management can offer you a decided advantage: deferred admission to the master of management program at the Kellogg Graduate School of Management, one of the most prestigious - and competitive - management schools in the nation.</p>
<p>The program helps you develop management skills right from the start; undergraduate course work can be interspersed with 1.5 years of Co-operative Engineering Education work experience in industry. At the end of this period, McCormick will award you a bachelor's degree in your chosen field of engineering and a co-op certificate. To qualify for admission to Kellogg, you must have earned at least a B average (3.0/4.0) in your undergraduate studies, and you must complete two (or three, if the co-op option is not selected) additional years of full-time work.</p>
<p>Note: these conditions are subject to change. Exact requirements will be delineated out to accepted students.
You need to apply to the Honors Program in Engineering and Management at the same time you apply for undergraduate admissions by requesting an application from the McCormick School. The deadline for application is January 15.</p>
<p>To apply to this program follow these application instructions.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>best program for this at wharton dual major in 4 year . you do need MBA after bs in business after that.</p>
<p>As shown by the post by Sam Lee, the Northwestern Kellogg program is not really a 5-year program, because the program forces you to get 2-3 years of work experience after you get your bachelor's. Nor does the program allow you to complete the bachelor's degree early. You might graduate early, but early graduation is not an inherent part of the program. </p>
<p>Hence, while the Northwestern program is still valuable, it's not ** as ** valuable as a true combined BS/MBA program (where the MBA would be obtained right after undergrad) would be. The best such combined program that I know about is still the 5-year BS/MBA program at Wharton. Of course, the catch is that you cannot apply to the program as a HS senior. Only 3rd-year Wharton undergrads can apply. And very few get in. So you might be going to Wharton for undergrad hoping to get into the combined program, only to not get in. </p>
<p>Don't get me wrong. The Northwestern program still does have some value, particularly because a person who is in the program doesn't have to worry about trying to amass a body of strong work experience in order to get admitted to B-school. In theory, a person in this program could finish the bachelor's and then go to work flipping burgers at McDonalds for 3 years before going to Kellogg. I'm obviously exaggerating because a person with a 3.0 in engineering from Northwestern is obviously not going to be flipping burgers, but you see my point. You could just be spending those 2-3 interim years just marking time and taking it easy, knowing that you have guaranteed admission to Kellogg. Heck, if I knew that I had guaranteed deferred admission to Kellogg coming up, I probably wouldn't exactly be champing at the bit to be the best employee either. Such is the moral hazard that comes with guaranteed deferred admission to anything.</p>