<p>Which school at Cornell has the fewest students/is the easient to get into? I'm asking because I'm still pretty wide open on the things I could major in, and would like to get into Cornell.</p>
<p>ILR is smallest, but not easy to get into if it's not ur passion! It does have one of the higher acceptance rates at Cornell, but u will not get in if u aren't interested (they put a big importance on passion.)</p>
<p>Hmmm, what is studied in ILR, and what are some careers that the school can lead to? Some of the majors in ILR on the Cornell website look interesting, but I'd still like to learn more. :)</p>
<p>Majors? There is only one.</p>
<p>I always find myself having trouble explaining to my friends what ILR is all about. When they say what it stands for (Industrial & Labor Relations), I get blank expressions on their faces... </p>
<p>Yet, I really like it, apparently showed through my application, and I think I'll have fun studying it at Cornell.</p>
<p>Er, I didn't mean majors. I meant classes or subjects or w/e. Labor Economics, for example.</p>
<p>diehldun, what was your application like?</p>
<p>I just had good work internships and a REALLY good essay that tied all my interests/experiences and related them directly to ILR, and how ILR would be a perfect fit...</p>
<p>AAP had the smallest entering class of all the colleges last year (110). As for "easiest to get into" that depends on what you mean. for you? or for the "average" applicant with a given set of test scores. if you are referring to the colleges' 2006 admission rates they can be calculated from the data found here:</p>
<p>general admission stats:</p>
<p>the only way to roughly compare the caliber of students between the schools is to compare graduation in top 10% of high school class. this is a bit sketchy because a large fraction of high schools do not report rank. i have never seen SAT scores for the individual colleges.</p>
<p>I recommend requesting a Cornell viewbook and information from ILR or any other college in Cornell. The viewbook and the ILR information booklet convinced me to apply to ILR.</p>
<p>I love public speaking and debate. I won a couple district championships in high school, and I am a sucker for politics.</p>
<p>diehldun, I get the same reaction from my friends and classmates. Some people at my school don't even know about Cornell nor much about the Ivy League. I knew that trying to explain what exactly an ILR major is would be difficult.</p>
<p>lmao I love politics too</p>
<p>I tell them it's like the psychology of business and some of the focus is on things like labor unions and human relations. Not that I want to go into either of those areas, but I do want to get my mba and I think that studying the psychology of business is muchhhhh more interesting then straight up business!</p>
<p>What careers can ILR lead to?</p>
<p>In terms of careers, ILR graduates have many options:
<a href="http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/admissions/careers/graduates.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/admissions/careers/graduates.html</a></p>