Looks like this is the better list from that site: The Experts' Choice: Great Places to Study Business https://www.collegexpress.com/lists/list/the-experts-choice-great-places-to-study-business/120/ Babson College (Babson Park, MA) Baylor University (Waco, TX) CUNY — Baruch College (New York, NY) Clarkson University (Potsdam, NY) Yes, connect me! Cornell University (Ithaca, NY) Emory University (Atlanta, GA) Northeastern University (Boston, MA) Syracuse University (Syracuse, NY) Temple University (Philadelphia, PA) Texas Christian University (Fort Worth, TX) Yes, connect me! The University of Arizona (Tucson, AZ) The University of Texas at Austin (Austin, TX) University of Houston (Houston, TX) University of Michigan — Ann Arbor (Ann Arbor, MI) Yes, connect me! University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (Chapel Hill, NC) University of Notre Dame (Notre Dame, IN) University of Oklahoma (Norman, OK) Yes, connect me! University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA) University of Southern California (Los Angeles, CA) University of Virginia (Charlottesville, VA) University of Washington, Seattle (Seattle, WA) Washington University in St. Louis (St. Louis, MO) |
What about the Smeal School at Penn State? I’ve heard good things but don’t have details. |
from previous post - this school is said to have 5% acceptance rate - just as difficult as the other penn state (wharton). |
Agreed, my child double majored in economics (colleges of arts & sciences) and finance (school of business) at a mid-range state school (Wisconsin) and the recruiting opportunities, job offers, etc. between the two weren't even in the same stratosphere. |
Between wisconsin and where else? |
I think she’s comparing on-campus recruiting between Wisconsin’s college of arts and sciences and Wisconsin’s school of business. Business schools will almost always have more robust career services than arts and sciences—that’s not unusual. |
That’s great, congrats to him. I’m the poster whose son is the finance concentration, and I really hope he listens to the advice people are giving him regarding accounting. |
I'm a business professor, and my perennial advice is that business can be a bad unfocused undergrad major. I took my first accounting and finance courses in my M.B.A. program, and had no idea they were academic areas. How the hell does a freshman want to major in these fields without taking a single course? Why does this student want a "better" school? What does "better" even mean? My charitable interpretation is that your kid made a bad decision and chose a school with poor opportunities. Now she wants to get her shit together with an employable major. |
Elon? Please. Tulane doesn’t have a strong business program either. |
Where are you a professor and what's an employable major if the kid is interested in business? |
I hope you’re not really a professor. That’s no way to talk about a young person who is leaning. |
What an odd thing to say. Kids can take economics in high school as well as they can take an intro to engineering class or a physiology class. No 18 year old really knows what it's like to be an investment banker or engineer or doctor. |
Oh got it. |
I know, seriously. Sounds disgruntled and so negative. Why would you teach business if it's so awful? |
+1. I really hope he or she isn’t a professor. |