<p>Im considering Cornell as well as Binghamton and UNC all for business. I know that Cornell may open the most doors for me but i am extremely concerned about the workload. Does anyone know for sure how extreme it is a difference in workload from the other schools?</p>
<p>Except for certain engineering and physical science courses of study, Cornell is no harder than any other top school in the country. Even then, Cornell is not as hard as MIT or Caltech. And even at Princeton, everybody needs to write junior and senior papers. Not so at Cornell.</p>
<p>For business there is absolutely no difference. </p>
<p>Cornell students just need to stop whining.</p>
<p>what if you are an engineering major? >_></p>
<p>Esp. if we're talking about AEM. There's no excuse to be whining about difficulty.</p>
<p>its fine. all majors are fine. ur grades obviously directly proportional to your Brain Size + How much you work + Amount of Luck. </p>
<p>If you are confident of your brain size, and are willing to work hard and if your fortune cookie tells you of anything but You are pretty. then it wont be that bad.</p>
<p>Awesome!!! I'm pretty damn lucky, probably will make up for my slacker characteristics and small brain size</p>
<p>there will be a lot of busy work...none of it is hard...just make sure you never get behind...</p>
<p>do the work the day it is assigned...</p>
<p>I'm finding that writing seminar is a lot of busywork. Problem sets in math and physics have been challenging, but exams have been survivable. If you're an engineer you'll spend a lot of time doing work, but it's usually pretty satisfying. The only really stressful part of my year so far has been studying for exams. Oh yeah, and writing seminar.</p>