Anonymous wrote:Cannot make any reasonable recommendation without more information such as cost of each program, intended major concentration within business (accounting, finance, management, supply chain, operations, info tech, marketing, real estate, business analytics, international, etc.), desired career, preferred geographic location after college. Most important is cost of attendance for each program.
If significant difference in COA, then the lowest cost option should save enough dollars for a one year specialty masters degree or for an MBA after several years of post undergraduate degree work experience. A one year specialty masters degree can be taken immediately after earning one's BS/BA degree if a second chance at the preferred job market is needed or wanted.
A $30,000 per year difference theoretically leaves at least $120,000 available/saved for grad school at a highly ranked, heavily recruited university.
If all 4 programs cost the same, then:
Michigan or Texas should be the top pick, then Georgia, then Wisconsin.
If an accounting major, then best to select the lowest cost option as CPA licenses require 5 years of college credits and accounting degree program are somewhat equal due to CPA licensing test requirements.