Double major/switching majors

<p>Hi, I have some questions regarding majors at UPenn.</p>

<li><p>If you apply for double major and make into only one of them, would you ever be able to study the other major later? for example, if I apply for music major and business major and only make music major, does that mean im only allowed to do music for the whole 4 years? </p></li>
<li><p>How easy is it to switch from one major to another major? i know it kinda depends on what major it is but… well so many people wants to go to wharton so bad… but its much harder to get accepted to wharton than say college right? so is there any way you get into a less selective major like one at college and then later switch to wharton?</p></li>
<li><p>which one of this is a better course? </p></li>
</ol>

<p>1.engineering in undergraduate and wharton graduate
2.wharton undergraduate and wharton graduate</p>

<p>im asking this because wharton undergrad is so popular and thus extremely selective. but if you think about it, 1 seems like it will get paid more later becuz its a combination of two as opposed to 2 which seems lil redundunt to me because graduate school teaches you business anyways.</p>

<ol>
<li><p>You don't apply for "double majors" so you would never apply for a music major and a business major. You would either apply to the College or apply to Wharton. You can pursure more than one major within a school, but if you want to get a degree from ANOTHER school, you have to apply to that school at the end of your freshman year. This is called a "dual degree."</p></li>
<li><p>You can apply for an internal transfer (to transfer from one school within Penn to another) at the end of your freshmen year. It is based on GPA and prerequisite courses.</p></li>
<li><p>Most Wharton students don't go back for an MBA (only 35% do) and those who do it usually don't go back to Wharton because they've had that experience already and they want to go to a different school, different city, and get a whole new network (probably the biggest factor). A lot of Engineers go back for MBAs so that's pretty normal.</p></li>
</ol>

<p>Engineering before MBA is better. You'll get a better scope of life and better analytical skills. Why on earth should you do business in both undergrad and grad? I don't think it's gonna be much different. Things just get deeper down in some topics when you study higher.</p>