<p>i'm interested in business, and I find the Hotel School more interesting than doing the AEM program. </p>
<p>As a Hispanic female from California, 2150 SAT Reasoning, do I stand a better chance in AEM or Hotel School?</p>
<p>i'm interested in business, and I find the Hotel School more interesting than doing the AEM program. </p>
<p>As a Hispanic female from California, 2150 SAT Reasoning, do I stand a better chance in AEM or Hotel School?</p>
<p>aside from needing work experience/interview and some other additions, hotel school has the lowest standards in cornell; from what i'm told.... my friends at cornell say its a joke, but i dont have the best idea</p>
<p>a kid from my school got in who was barely top 20%, and had a 1200 SAT got in</p>
<p>The standards aren't necessarily "low", they're just different. I think your chances at the hotel school depend on your work experience.</p>
<p>exactly. your 3 sport varsity athlete 1600 student 4.0 gpa w/ research credentials probably has a low chance because he has had very little work experience, not to mention any in the hospitality industry</p>
<p>If you give them a credit card, they will reserve a room for you.</p>
<p>The question to ask is WHY is the Hotel School more interesting. Do you have some work experience in the hospitality industry or can you get some before you apply? And -- most important -- can you write a killer 500 word essay about why you want to study in the hotel school?</p>
<p>The Hotel School is very interesting and gives you a lot of different sorts of opportunities -- read their brochures or website and see just where you'd fit. I do gather they are not quite as stats driven, but they want to see a bright ambitious student with an appropriate focus.</p>
<p>I heard hotel school is like an MBA?</p>
<p>MBAs don't have wine tasting requirements. The hotel school is sort of pre-professional. You will graduate knowing how to run a hotel or restaurant, from what to tell housekeeping to do to the rooms to how to order food for the in house restaurant to how to handle pay schedules, land purchases, everything.</p>
<p>but can you all agree that on an academic only level, the hotel school is easiest to get into granted that you have the work experience needed</p>
<p>Getting into the Hotel School? With no family in the hospitality business, it's like catching flies with chopsticks. Otherwise, piece of cake.</p>
<p>yeah, academically it is by far the easiet</p>