Undergraduate Majors

The Whitman School offers nine undergraduate business majors.

Each student in the Whitman School is required to complete one major field of study. You will have two years to explore your options and select the major (or multiple majors) that best fits your interests.

Whitman students have the opportunity to take two complementary business majors, while adding minimal credits to their program.

Experiential Learning

The Whitman School creates and facilitates experiential programming that bridges the gap between classroom learning and practical application — all while expanding job placement opportunities and helping students build meaningful connections. 

 

Experiential Learning

Clubs and Connections

You can meet and network with students and professionals who share your business and entrepreneurial interest by participating in our approximately 17 student clubs and organizations.

 

Clubs and Organizations

Student Profiles

Building Bridges Across Continents: Nana Kwame Nyarko-Ansong Charts a Path from Ghana to Global Finance

Nana Kwame Nyarko-Ansong ’26 M.S.

M.S. Finance

  • Full-Time

Whitman gave me the canvas and the freedom to paint the educational experience I desired—one built around my intellectual curiosity, my ambitions and my career goals.

Nana Kwame Nyarko-Ansong ’26 M.S. arrived at Whitman with a clear goal: prepare for a career in investment banking while maintaining the flexibility to chart his own path. Having left Accra, Ghana at seventeen on a scholarship to attend high school in Singapore, then earning another scholarship to the University of Rochester, Nyarko-Ansong brought a global perspective shaped by experiences across three continents. What he didn't expect was just how much freedom Whitman would give him to design his own education. 

 

Designing His Own Path 

When researching graduate programs, Nyarko-Ansong sought a traditional, STEM-designated finance program. Whitman’s M.S. in Finance delivered, but it was the curriculum’s flexibility that truly transformed his experience. He took advantage of that flexibility to pursue real estate courses alongside electives in corporate finance, investing and analytics, expanding the breadth of his expertise. “For a typical master’s program in the U.S., that kind of curricular flexibility is not, in my opinion, as widespread as you would think,” he says. 


The highlight has been his independent study, where he’s creating deliverables for real 2025 investment banking transactions—mergers and acquisitions, restructuring advisory and private capital deals—as though he were the analyst on the team. “Rather than waiting for a spring internship, I took ownership of my own professional development,” Nyarko-Ansong explains. “It’s a way to build a portfolio demonstrating practical application, not just theoretical knowledge.” 

 

Paying It Forward 

Beyond academics, Nyarko-Ansong has become a fixture in the Ballentine Investment Center, informally mentoring at least fifteen undergraduates on finance coursework, interview preparation and career planning. At least six have secured internships through his guidance. “I am a product of the people who mentored me,” he says. “I’ve been on scholarships since grade four. People have consistently paid it forward and invested in me, and I want to do the same.” 


His on-campus jobs in Whitman have provided crucial support. “It's been incredibly healing,” Nyarko-Ansong says. "My professors and the learning kept me at top speed, but the community is the floor that supports everything else." 


That community fuels him to pursue a career path that improves the lives of others. Working at an M&A advisory firm in Ghana on deals totaling $200 million, he witnessed finance’s power to transform communities. “I realized that the world’s most transformative ideas rarely come to life without the capital that supports them,” he says. “Capital is a tool, and its impact depends on the leaders who steward it.” 


Recently inducted into the Beta Gamma Sigma Honor Society and nominated for Syracuse’s Student Employee of the Year, Nyarko-Ansong is now targeting investment banking analyst positions at major New York City firms. His long-term vision: gain experience at the highest levels, then bring that expertise back to Ghana and other emerging markets. 


“My family has poured into me in ways I cannot fully repay,” he says. “Long term, I want to take everything I'm building here at Whitman—the experience, the expertise and the network—and bring it back home to contribute toward improving lives.“ 




By Danielle Rosenburgh 

 

Tagged As:

  • Full-Time

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