<p>Doesn’t 27% from a remaining 75% that includes a nursing school, engineering school, significant communications school/major seem high to you? </p>
<p>What’s interesting is Penn has a variety of undergrad schools/majors that, on first blush, have nothing to do with finance and consulting (as I mentioned above, nursing, communications, etc.), but 27% of this employed population goes into finance/consulting, a percentage that is noticeably higher than, say, Brown (20%) and Yale (17%). </p>
<p>I’m just curious because this number appears higher than I expected.</p>