<p>And, I heard that economics as undergrad help students to get in top MBA program. But, I found MIT Sloan or Berkeley has about 27% engineering program. I am kind of between engineering and finance/economics right now. Sometimes, I like engineering better but now I like economics.</p>
<p>You might need to do some thinking about what you want to do…</p>
<p>If your unsure, a double major like Computer Engineering and Mathematics
would be a good start. You could always drop one of the two if it’s too much.</p>
<p>Goldman Sachs = top jobs; PhD in Financial Mathematics, with a strong background in computer programming. [Click</a> Link Here](<a href=“http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=1w4VW4X_Wvh1esmQ6RPQiqpN3HLS-yc9hmPdOceLm43Bs7GT3SC4dkznAmepb&hl=en&authkey=COHzr40L]Click”>http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=1w4VW4X_Wvh1esmQ6RPQiqpN3HLS-yc9hmPdOceLm43Bs7GT3SC4dkznAmepb&hl=en&authkey=COHzr40L)</p>
<p>CFO = many choices, plenty of accounting, Masters/MBA in business, finance, or management.</p>
<p>Genius,</p>
<p>Have you talked to your parents about how much they’ll spend each year on college?</p>
<p>That answer will largely determine where you should apply.</p>
<p>you need to be careful when you read about various scholarships, such as Crimson and Academic Elite. Those are very competitive scholarships with many students qualifying, but very few actually getting awarded. </p>
<p>I don’t think a student who can’t fill out FAFSA can get the First Generation scholarship. I’m also not sure if a student who is given the Presidential Scholarship will get the FG scholarship. My son’s friend is a FG instate student, and he got Presidential, but he wasn’t given FG scholarship.</p>