<p>Assuming guaranteed acceptance to the school of my choice, is a mathematics major with no clear career interest better off going to CAS or Wharton. I may want to become a doctor, lawyer, math professor, or businessman, but as a highschooler I just dont know yet. I love math and am certain that I will be a math major, but am I better off at Wharton or CAS?</p>
<p>You can’t major in math in Wharton. You can only do that in CAS.</p>
<p>I think you suck at math.</p>
<p>What trigonometric functions have undefined radians in the 1st quadrant?</p>
<p>Write me a propositional calculus statement in symbolic logic using “material implication”.</p>
<p>Wharton is known to be a business school. Not a mathematics institution.</p>
<p>I don’t think this guy knows anything about math let alone is good at it.</p>
<p>You should apply to the College seeing as Wharton has nothing to do with math. The mathematics department is in CAS. You seem to be very interested in liberal arts and are still considering various College majors.</p>
<p>If you don’t know that you want to do business for sure, then definitely go with CAS. If by sometime between now and application deadline time you decide that you want business for sure, then go with Wharton. And yeah like above posters said, you can only major in math in CAS.</p>
<p>thanks guys. Ill be applying to CAS then.</p>
<p>Also sksbl88, why all the hate. What makes you think im not good at math. If you think my question was a stupid, I asked because I know that a degree from wharton is considered more valuable, so perhaps I could have double majored in Wharton Economics and Mathematics. Its not stupid to guess that someone may have had this idea before.</p>
<p>To answer your question about the trigonometric functions, the answer is Tan,Cot,Sec, and Csc. </p>
<p>Im a junior going into senior year and will be taking AP calc this year. So i cant answer that second question.</p>
<p>P.S. my dad writes the second most used calculus textbook for universities, which has an AP version. He says that the second question is not covered in AP calc.</p>
<p>plus, im interested in math, but dont want a PHD. So if I liked math, but wanted to get an MBA, a wharton degree would help. </p>
<p>this has got to be the most negative, conceited, judgmental, and unhelpful forum I have ever visited.</p>
<p>Just saying that you can concentrate in statistics and/or get a math minor when in Wharton.</p>
<p>However, if you are even considering grad school on math, CAS is your best option.</p>
<p>I was a math major and transferred from another university to Wharton. I’m sure you’re great at math and everything, I just want to warn you about it. Seeing as you haven’t even taken calculus, you haven’t even tasted “real math.” Pre-calc and algebra II and stuff are important skills (well at least algebra II is one), but upper level math classes are MUCH different. Much more theory-based and proofs-based. Before making any decisions, try contacting other math majors (friends, family, perhaps an admissions office can put you in contact with one) and talk to them about what they are studying. It sounds like your Dad might even have a PhD.</p>