<p>A friend and I were arguing about the ranking order for the colleges at Cornell. I wanna hear what you guys think the order should be.</p>
<p>The three crown jewels of Cornell are Arts, Architecture, and Engineering.</p>
<p>Ya, it's way too difficult to rank. Those 3 are the crown jewels, and then the others are SO unique that it is hard to really put them into something. Like Hotel is AMAZING and the #1 hotel school. ILR is also Incredible and completely unique. The list goes on....</p>
<p>this has been argued many times before with no real conclusion having ever been met</p>
<p>The only thing that's certain is no one has mentioned CALS. :(</p>
<p>or HumEc .</p>
<p>or Cornell hockey, for which I waited in line for 8 freaking hours.</p>
<p>^^^ 8?</p>
<p>I only left the line for maybe 30 minutes at most!! Try 22 hours!</p>
<p>Great seats, though.</p>
<p>HumEc, ILR, and CALS really aren't very distinguished...i agree with ElectronicError's rankings</p>
<p>^^^</p>
<p>What are you talking about?? Those 3 programs are among the highest ranked and most highly recruited at Cornell. Same with Hotel - among the best in the world. I thought it was more obvious, but I guess some people just learn more slowly than others.</p>
<p>How many ILR schools are there in this country? 1?</p>
<p>nah, ILR just takes things that most business schools have and combine them into a separate school. You'll find the same departments at Harvard, Wharton, Stanford, MIT, and so forth. Cornell's is just the largest and has a few more specialized programs within it (such as labor economics). I've looked at grad programs at the already-mentioned schools (for org. behavior), though Cornell's department is much larger and has more resources.</p>