<p>I am interested in engineering and business, and I just want to know a undergraduate college that both has top business and top engineering programs.</p>
<p>MIT for one. </p>
<p>UT Austin, Michigan. There are some more, I just can't think of them right now.</p>
<p>EDIT: Northwestern, Wisconsin, Duke, Purdue</p>
<p>University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, for sure. </p>
<p>And I didn't apply there, so it really isn't a home-state pick :).</p>
<p>Universities with top 10 BBA and Engineering programs.
Carnegie Mellon University
Cornell University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
University of California-Berkeley
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor</p>
<p>Universities with top 25 BBA and Engineering programs.
Pennsylvania State University-University Park
Purdue University-West Lafayette
University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign
University of Maryland-College Park
University of Pennsylvania
University of Southern California
University of Texas-Austin
University of Virginia
University of Wisconsin-Madison</p>
<p>Johns Hopkins and Northwestern both have excellent Engineering programs and both are in the process of developping undergraduate Business programs, but the development of their Business programs is nowhere near complete.</p>
<p>Hmm...are you definitely set on business? What about Economics? If you like engineering and business, I feel like you're the management type, which leads me to believe that you're MBA-bound, which would make a business bachelor's pretty useless.</p>
<p>MIT, Berkeley, and Stanford have top notch engineering and economics programs. Stanford has this thing called Management Science and Engineering. Basically you apply engineering concepts to problems that managers face.</p>
<p>Bucknell!!!!!!!!!</p>
<p>While I would generally say that the better route is to get your B.S. in engineering, work for a few years, then go for the MBA (either full time or part time on your employer's dime), Lehigh's Integrated Business & Engineering (IBE) program may be right up your alley. Trying to combine a full BBA & engineering degree would likely take forever at most schools, since there is so little overlap in classes.</p>
<p>O, man, the OP's s/n just brought me a fond memory of the wild shopping spree @Lee Tae Won ;). Another fantastic bargains for Italian designer shoes could be found @Tong Tae Moon (?sp) mega shopping center near seoul- I loved it!!!</p>
<p>Here is my $0.02, just a token of appreciation of beautiful people in seoul</p>
<p>1) Top-10 undergrad Eng. Schools (USNEWS)
1. MIT
2. Berkeley, Stanford
4. Caltech, UIUC
6 GT, Michigan
8 CMU, Purdue
10 Cornell</p>
<p>2) Top-10 Undergrad Business School(USNEWS)
1. UPenn
2. MIT
3. Berkeley, Michigan
5 NYU, UNC, UT-Austin
8 CMU
9 USC, UVA</p>
<p>Based on 1) & 2), and also utilizing the objective functions with the appropriate weightings (W_i) and constraints, the best schools for undergrad Engineering and Business are:</p>
<p>MIT-Berkeley-Michigan-CMU</p>
<p>Hopkins has a fabulous business and entrepreneurship minor, that comes directly out of the engineering school. Hopkins is a big proponent of engineers, in fact, everyone, no matter what major, to have a solid business background.
Hopkins just opened the Carey School of Business. As I understand it, there are now several interesting joint majors.</p>
<p>I am interested in exactly the same thing. I have a good-ish list of schools on all levels that might help.</p>
<p>MIT, CMU, UC-B, UVA, Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Purdue, Wisconsin, UT, Penn</p>
<p>Emory has one where you can get a degree from there and Georgia Tech..</p>