<p>Can any current Sloan undergrads(preferably finance majors) give me a feeling for the workload? How many hours a day/week are you working outside of class in non-exam times? Is it mostly problem sets or other stuff?</p>
<p>I don't think we have any Sloanies who currently comment on the board, but I'm passing the question along to a friend of mine who's currently a junior Sloan/biology double major. I'll report back with her answer.</p>
<p>EDIT: Just for the record, all Sloan students are management majors. That's the only undergraduate program within Sloan.</p>
<p>Thanks for your help. I meant Finance concentration not major. However, it does not really matter because the concentration is defined by only a few courses.</p>
<p>Another question, do Sloan undergrads get as many big name recruiters as say Wharton?</p>
<p>You can see the companies which hired 2007 graduates [url=<a href="http://web.mit.edu/career/www/infostats/graduation07.pdf%5Dhere%5B/url">http://web.mit.edu/career/www/infostats/graduation07.pdf]here[/url</a>] (PDF). This isn't, of course, a list of all companies which recruited at MIT, but it's a list of companies which successfully recruited at MIT. :)</p>
<p>mollie (or others) I'd love to hear an answer to this if you know or have talked to anyone. Just based on being at MIT, is there any hunch that it is much easier/harder than other [engineering] majors?</p>
<p>Yes, the (very strong) prevailing stereotype is that it's easier to be a Sloanie than it is to be an engineering major.</p>
<p>I mean, my best friend in college was 15/6, and she found 6 to be much more difficult than 15.</p>