Anonymous wrote:OP your kid has stats for a much better business school. As someone who has had global responsibilities and has done an expat assignment abroad for an international company you don’t need an “international business” degree. Have your kid go to the highest ranked school and overall business school (university of South Carolina is not top) The best b schools all offer global exposure to their undergrads, trips, even global internships. Look them up. Then join a F500 with global presence for the first gig out of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We don't really follow rankings, but when searching for strong International Business programs, university of south carolina always comes up as a top program. The school was never on our radar, but we are looking into it now. Dors anyone has any insight or experience with the program and school overall? I have a senior so we are in the midst of stressful applications and appreciate guidance. My kid has 3.85 unweighted gpa with rigor, 34 act, Asian language fluency, and interesting EC. Interested in studying international business or maybe international relations but with curriculum that offers some practical application- more than just academic theory. Thanks!
There are at least two undergraduate programs at U. South Carolina for International Business. The more, or most, competitive in terms of entrance requirements is for a cohort based group that spends at least two years of their four years studying abroad.
Anonymous wrote:We don't really follow rankings, but when searching for strong International Business programs, university of south carolina always comes up as a top program. The school was never on our radar, but we are looking into it now. Dors anyone has any insight or experience with the program and school overall? I have a senior so we are in the midst of stressful applications and appreciate guidance. My kid has 3.85 unweighted gpa with rigor, 34 act, Asian language fluency, and interesting EC. Interested in studying international business or maybe international relations but with curriculum that offers some practical application- more than just academic theory. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:My dd is applying. It's a popular safety for good students in the south.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a great kid. Just remember American businesses are generally much better than international businesses. I’d just find the very best business school he can get into, keep up the Chinese fluency, and he can see where it takes him. Pigeonholing his major as “international business” might not be the best idea.