<p>Can anyone tell me anything about NW's Business School, or if they even have one?</p>
<p>They don't have one. You major in Economics if you want to go into the Business field.</p>
<p>If you mean Northwestern by NW, I don't know what MightyNick is talking about, but the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern is ranked the #1 Business School in BusinessWeek, arguably the most credible source for anything business related. It is, however, only for postgraduates.</p>
<p>I remember reading somewhere that they recently started an undergraduate program in financial management, but I'm not fully acquainted with the program so you'll have to look it up on their website.</p>
<p>Kellogg School is for graduate students. At the undergrad level Northwestern does not have a Business School.</p>
<p>I digged up a link from google for the program I was talking about:</p>
<p>I believe I pointed out the fact that Kellogg is for graduates, but like I mentioned they're apparently starting a program for undergraduates this year.</p>
<p>Northwestern has a gruduate business school, the Kellogg School of Management, the best graduate business school in the country (a la businessweek and the OC).</p>
<p>Northwestern does not have an undergraduate business program with majors such as accounting, however it does have a top 10 economics program, a major called Learning and Organizational Change (consulting-ish), and an extremely strong pre-business program called Mathematical Methods in the Social Sciences. All of these programs routinely send students to top business firms, and where data is available are recruited more highly than most, if not all, "business" undergrads (for instance: <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=235587&highlight=consulting+core%5B/url%5D">http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=235587&highlight=consulting+core</a>)</p>
<p>This year, Northwestern has introduced a certificate program through Kellogg. It's a four-class sequence for either engineers or arts & sciences students (Managerial Analytics or Financial Economics, respectively) which has been cited as being better than anything offered at any other undergraduate business program. It "blows anything offered at Wharton out of the water" according to a university official (Wharton is widely accepted to be the best undergraduate business school in the country).</p>