Agreed. Also, for those who truly believe in the innate skill and judgment of "smarty-pants," I recommend the book/documentary titled "Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room." See what the financial A-Team did there. FWIW, Jeff Skilling has an MBA form Harvard. |
| Catholic U |
| Miami University. It is in Oxford, Ohio. Highly ranked business college. |
+1 Also, Loyola Marymount in Baltimore. I know of at least one financial firm that hires traders out of there. |
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Remember that a lot of these "average" colleges have much higher requirements to get into for the business school than for other majors. And if you get in for a different major, unless you maintain a very high GPA and can get business prereqs. such as calculus, mircoecon., macroecon., etc. with good grades, it can range from hard to nearly impossible to transfer into the business program.
You also have to very strong in math. |
True. Thus the utility of the P&Q data, which can be otherwise hard to find:
Caveat, it's unclear what class year this admission data came from. We'll see if they come out with a fresh ranking in December. |
| Some CTCL colleges have business majors. |
I agree. I worked in big 4 here, and I was always impressed with the JMU and Va tech cpas I encountered. |
Same with Fairfield. |
Just to clarify for others, that's Loyola Maryland. (Loyola Marymount is in Los Angeles. Easy typo to make.) |
I think it really depends on what you mean by finance. If you mean CPA at a big 4- there are lots of great schools with strong programs including JMU. If OP really means hedge fund manager, the path is a but harder |
Why declaring Econ? |
+1. Extremely social school too. Good training ground. |
Ha ha!! (Don’t listen to this OP based on the stats you noted.) |
| UMich, USC, NYU are all safeties for finance |