<p><a href=“http://www.columbia.edu/cu/opir/abstract/cc%20undergraduate%20degrees%20by%20program%20of%20study%202007-2008.htm[/url]”>http://www.columbia.edu/cu/opir/abstract/cc%20undergraduate%20degrees%20by%20program%20of%20study%202007-2008.htm</a></p>
<p><a href=“http://www.columbia.edu/cu/opir/abstract/en%20undergraduate%20degrees%20by%20program%20of%20study%202007-2008.htm[/url]”>http://www.columbia.edu/cu/opir/abstract/en%20undergraduate%20degrees%20by%20program%20of%20study%202007-2008.htm</a></p>
<p>Data for the Class of 2008</p>
<p>This is what makes me proud that I’m at Columbia. There really is a diversity of interest in what kids are studying. I’ve tried to explain this in my posts, but now I actually found numbers. These numbers are an indication that Columbia is truly all rounded, so you can’t go wrong no matter what you want to study. In my calculation I have added up majors + concentrators + joint-majors/2. Here what I noticed:</p>
<p>Columbia College</p>
<p>Econ and Poli Sci are the largest: 148 & 170.5 respectively
English and History round up the big four at: 114 and 122 respectively</p>
<p>mid size (30+):</p>
<p>Psych: 68 + 32/2 (from neuro) = 84
Bio: 44 + 19/2 (from bio chem) + 32/2 (from neuro) = 69.5
Math: 46 + 14 (from econ math) = 60
Art history: 33
Anthro: 33
Philosophy: 30</p>
<p>and for those of you who worry about sciences (phy and chem), they too are well stocked at: 15 and 18.5 respectively.</p>
<p>SEAS from largest:</p>
<p>Civil: 41
BME: 38
Mech E: 38
Engineering Management Systems: 36
Electrical: 35
Applied Math: 34
Chem E: 29
Comp Sci: 27
Financial Engineering: 20
Operations Research: 19
Earth and Environmental: 15
Applied Physics: 15
Industrial Engineering: 12
Material Science: 8</p>