<p>These schools don't have undergrad business? all they have is MBA ? and also is the Carroll School of Management an easy school to get accepted to?</p>
<p>Princeton doesn't have a business school and CSoM is not an easy school to get into.</p>
<p>Harvard
Yale
Princeton
Columbia
Dartmouth
Brown</p>
<p>^ these do not have undergraduate business programs. The closest thing is Economics at all of these, and OperationsResearch/FinancialEngineering at Princeton and Columbia's engineering schools.</p>
<p>By the way... Princeton doesn't have an MBA at all (nor does it have a law school, or a medical school--- it doesn't have anything much at all on the graduate level. THe most respected MBA's are from Harvard, Penn (Wharton), & Columbia.</p>
<p>Funny how you forget to mention two programs...GASP...not in the northeast...and OMG not in the ivy league! UChicago and Northwestern Kellogg are ranked #1 and #3 respectively in the BusinessWeek 2006 rankings of MBA's.</p>
<p>
[quote]
[ Princeton ] doesn't have anything much at all on the graduate level
[/quote]
</p>
<p>A common mistake here on CC. Princeton has some of the best graduate programs in the world. What it has very little of is professional school programs (like the examples mentioned, a medical school or a law school). But it's possible to have a great graduate school experience at Princeton University, and the presence of graduate-level courses is one draw for some students who apply to study there as undergraduates.</p>
<p>Princeton actually has several Graduate programs in Engineering and Humanities.</p>
<p>What about...Stanford?</p>
<p>Stanford is at the top, in nearly every discipline</p>
<p>Bottom line: an econ degree from any of the schools you listed would put you in an excellent position to either go for your MBA or go right into the work force after college.</p>
<p>Yeah Stanford is dominate in basically everything.</p>
<p><em>thinking about Stanford for EA as international..</em></p>