<p>hey just wonderin who gets more work cornell or harvard?
like hw/studying and stuff</p>
<p>dont worry im not applying to harvard, im cornell ed and my friend is harvard ea, we were just wondering</p>
<p>we’re econ majors btw</p>
<p>hey just wonderin who gets more work cornell or harvard?
like hw/studying and stuff</p>
<p>dont worry im not applying to harvard, im cornell ed and my friend is harvard ea, we were just wondering</p>
<p>we’re econ majors btw</p>
<p>cmon guyz bump</p>
<p>How could we know the answer to that? To make that comparison you would have to have attended both schools for a significant amount of time. Most posters here have not (yet) attended either school, and probably no one here has attended both.</p>
<p>As with anywhere, that depends on you–on what you take, on how efficient you are, what you consider “a lot” of work, etc. We have quite a bit of work at H, and I’m sure Cornell is no different.</p>
<p>At Harvard, how much work you have depends almost entirely on the choices you make – both in terms of what concentration you choose and which courses you choose. If you major in Engineering, enroll in six courses per term, take an intensive Asian language, take a bunch of graduate seminars, and try to make straight A’s, you could end up with 100+ hours of extremely demanding work per week. Or you could major in Sociology, take only four courses per term, pick the very easiest courses you can find, skip doing a thesis, aim for a C+ average, and work 20 easy, relaxed hours per week (leaving time for an extremely demanding job, research, or activity). Most people, like me, did something in between those extremes.</p>
<p>I think comparing friends at Cornell’s work, there is more work at Harvard- although it depends on so many things like Hanna mentioned.</p>