Engineering and Business Program?

<p>Im looking for schools with either a program in engineering and business (combined somehow). OR if a school offers a duel degree at a top engineering and top business school (all undergraduate btw). However, if its a 5-6 year program please refrain from mentioning those. Thanks!</p>

<p>Should be doable at any top university.</p>

<p>Can get a dual degree at Wash U in four years if you work everything out ahead of time, are dedicated to it, and take 5-6 courses a semester</p>

<p>How about industrial engineering and management sciences (ranked 4th by USN) coupled with one of the two undergraduate certificate programs (master-level courses actually) at Kellogg?</p>

<p>[Industrial</a> Engineering and Management Sciences : Northwestern University](<a href=“http://www.iems.northwestern.edu/]Industrial”>http://www.iems.northwestern.edu/)
[Certificate</a> Program for Undergraduates - Kellogg School of Management - Northwestern University](<a href=“http://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/Certificate.aspx]Certificate”>Certificate Program for Undergraduates | Kellogg School of Management)</p>

<p>It is probably better to do this at the graduate level. There are several big-name schools (U-Michigan, Northwestern come to mind) that have combined MBA/M.Eng programs. Doing the double business/engineering as an undergraduate will not get you into management any faster because in order to manage engineers/scientists, you MUST put in some years as a grunt engineer first. On top of that, an engineer with experience leading teams will be considered on the same level (or even higher regard) than some MBA w/o the grunt engineering experience.</p>

<p>UPenn has a program called Jerome Fisher M&T which has both business at Wharton and engineering. Since it is a ivy school, its really really difficult to get into this program. They only accept 50 students into this program.</p>

<p>Lehigh has an honors program, Integrated Business and Engineering. I believe Penn State has something like this too. Both for undergrads.</p>