<p>is it possible for an avg B.S. eng. grad to get a higher gpa than the avg. bus student?</p>
<p>what is the gpa range for the eng and bus student?</p>
<p>is it possible for an avg B.S. eng. grad to get a higher gpa than the avg. bus student?</p>
<p>what is the gpa range for the eng and bus student?</p>
<p>No. I'm not aware of any program that has lower business GPAs than engineer GPAs.</p>
<p>very unlikely. business GPAs are inflated IMO.</p>
<p>Engineering curriculum is generally much more difficult than business curriculum. Most engineering students who fails to survive pursues business degree for this reason.</p>
<p>Yeah, I'm wondering if this may be one of the reasons my daughter wants to switch from engineering to business. She lives on the business honors floor of her dorm and no one else seems to be working this hard, and struggling with grades. :(</p>
<p>Tell me about that, I used to live with a business major. He had a 3.8 but watched more TV than my mom. I, on the other hand, was pulling a 3 but spending more time in the library than a librarian.</p>
<p>I have the best one - one of my best friends is a Real Estate major, his gpa? 3.8, he never goes to class, just crams two days before the exams, and pays people to write the essays for him. You couldn't last a few in engineering without attending class.</p>
<p>I lived with a business major who did a lot less work than me (would go out on weekdays etc) and who had a much higher gpa. It just seems like the material is so much easier.</p>
<p>Undergraduate Business is a common sense major for those who cant handle Math, science or engineering.</p>
<p>I am a engineering student, though I want to be a quant, But even though im a engineering student I still have far more knowledge of finance than any undergrad that I have met. I just like finance but also love algorithms, so I will do both.</p>