Rank these schools:

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:For business (we are in MD)

UMD
UGA
UF
Wisconsin
Ohio State


Depends on what factors are important to you (cost, distance, salary outcomes, school spirit, ??).


Oh please. UF comes up first on every list and UMD & OSU at the bottom. UGA and Wisconsin interchangeable. And I only have a kid at UMD and Clemson. Every one of those schools are excellent.
Anonymous
The recruitment at all these schools will primarily be regional. So select which region of the country your DC wants to live in after college and choose from there.

Miami - UF
Atlanta - UGA
Chicago - Wisconsin, OSU in that order
DC - UMD

California - Wisconsin has a small edge due to historical reputation and strong engineering departments.
NYC - UMD, UF and Wisconsin due to alumni population. UMD is also only 3.5 hours away from NYC.

Anonymous
Excellent feedback so far! Agree that all of them are very close wrt overall program quality and recognition for UG business programs. Recruitment is weighed more regionally. I would like to add that each of them have strengths in certain majors/ specializations:
Accounting - UGA, UFL and tOSU
Finance - UGA, UFL and tOSU
MIS - UGA and UMD
Marketing - WISC and UFL
Supply Chain /Operations - tOSU and UMD
Anonymous
By focusing on business studies so early and not developing writing and critical thinking skills associated with a more academic line of study, your child will be mired in middle management forever.
Anonymous
All third tier choices. Take a gap year and try again.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:By focusing on business studies so early and not developing writing and critical thinking skills associated with a more academic line of study, your child will be mired in middle management forever.

Ignore this advice. Doing a liberal arts major to gain "writing and critical thinking skills" is the best path to become a loser chanting in support of terrorism in the streets on NYC and DC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:By focusing on business studies so early and not developing writing and critical thinking skills associated with a more academic line of study, your child will be mired in middle management forever.

Ignore this advice. Doing a liberal arts major to gain "writing and critical thinking skills" is the best path to become a loser chanting in support of terrorism in the streets on NYC and DC.


LOL. Pretty sure you’ve posted similar stuff before. Please don’t stop.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:By focusing on business studies so early and not developing writing and critical thinking skills associated with a more academic line of study, your child will be mired in middle management forever.

Ignore this advice. Doing a liberal arts major to gain "writing and critical thinking skills" is the best path to become a loser chanting in support of terrorism in the streets on NYC and DC.



Lmao!!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:All third tier choices. Take a gap year and try again.


Sure, will get right on that.
Anonymous
Business is a stupid degree.

All of important business acumen and knowledge can be learned faster, better, cheaper and more lucratively in smarter ways. It almost advertises that you are a worker bee, not too bright and not ready for business. Only accounting requires a degree since it’s a regulated profession and not business.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:By focusing on business studies so early and not developing writing and critical thinking skills associated with a more academic line of study, your child will be mired in middle management forever.

Ignore this advice. Doing a liberal arts major to gain "writing and critical thinking skills" is the best path to become a loser chanting in support of terrorism in the streets on NYC and DC.

Very few of the students at Top 10 MBA programs (the people who typically become CEOs) majored in business as undergraduates.
Anonymous
The children have joined the thread. Good night boys, time for bed.
Anonymous
Your DC should be doing this based on their interests.
Anonymous
Your 17/18 year olds know where they want to live already??
Anonymous
YOU rank them for yourself.
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