<p>Thanks so much UCBChemEGrad! The pictures were really nice. I’m rethinking the whole importance of having a college campus feel again T<em>T xD .</em>. </p>
<p>O i think there are other people in the same situation as I am so I’m going to post what other stuff i found out so far @.@;</p>
<p>Stern students take mostly core undergrad classes their first year. I’m not sure about second year. So I guess the 4 year program isn’t that different from the 2 year program? </p>
<p>Stern has more classes with fewer than 20 students. </p>
<p>Junior year spring break Stern students are required to travel abroad to study. I think BusinessWeek says Stern has various connections so many students also have the option of studying for at another prestigious international b program for some semesters. But this is all possible at Haas too. However, IMO, Stern’s program has a more international feel to it. </p>
<p>IMO AP courses are more useful at Berkeley than they are at NYU. A lot of Berkeley requirements can be bypassed by using AP’s (like American cultures, the two writing/reading/english related courses, sciences, calculus <– omg yes.). But for me these all depend a lot on this years ap scores. -_- so crunch time D: no more senioritis. </p>
<p>It is supposed to be very easy to double major within Stern, especially for Finance and Accounting. </p>
<p>Supposedly neither curve at either school is supposed to be as impossibly difficult as rumored. Although both of them are infamous for being hard so >_>.</p>
<p>Forget about graduating in 3 years for both. D: highly unlikely. Stern b/c Ap credits aren’t that applicable. Haas because it’s program starts junior year.</p>