<p>Dartmouth- Economics and maybe Theater</p>
<p>Georgia tech- electrical engineering or computer engineering</p>
<p>Georgia Tech- Industrial Engineering</p>
<p>Premed- University of Alabama</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>otherwise known as, “imaginary engineering”.</p>
<p>But at least you will be doing it at GA tech cuz they make everything challenging i hear</p>
<p>haha realistic. Good thinking or everyone here would have Harvard.</p>
<p>Georgetown- Finance</p>
<p>UChicago - physics</p>
<p>UC berkeley- computer science</p>
<p>Chemical Engineering- UT/Rice</p>
<p>Ah yes, “imaginary engineering”. My sis was a Gatech student and she told me about that. Its better than going to the business school, also known as the “M-Train”</p>
<p>Princeton - economics</p>
<p>Stanford - Chemical Engineering</p>
<p>Broadcast Journalism</p>
<p>ehhh… I don’t do the whole #1 school thing. This is my top 3 though,
Northeastern University
Boston University
Syracuse University
:)</p>
<p>Neuroscience/ Neural Chemistry and Classical Studies</p>
<p>Major: Forever changing. I know I’m going into Pre Med though.
Top schools: Boston University, possibly Kenyon College</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>so why are you doing industrial instead of EE, ChemE, MechE, etc?</p>
<p>and can you explain why business school is called the M Train? im a little slow</p>
<p>Bump 10char</p>
<p>Computer Science.
School: Cheapest one I get into. (Basically applying to almost every school in Texas
)</p>
<p>Scripps - Media Studies and Creative Writing double major</p>
<p>@wolframalphamale- because I want to go into finance/banking and IE gives me the best chance for that. And the whole “imaginary engineering” thing is just a joke. No one really looks down on it, as most people in the program are pursuing non-engineering careers, but an elite engineering school gives them a better chance than the other schools</p>
<p>And its called the “M-Train” because the School of Management is where all the basketball/football/baseball players who slack off go to. Though the accounting/finance tracks are respectable, most people opt for the “general management” track (which is a joke). </p>
<p>It is also very common for STEM (math and science) majors who are struggling to switch to the management school, which is considerably less rigorous.</p>