Anonymous wrote:Business major is best for students at middling schools who need social mobility. If you're already at the top, there's no reason to major in something your parents could teach you one night at family dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because top schools are interested in students eager and able to engage with ideas. They do not want to be purely vocational schools for students who have no ambitions or interests beyond making money.
If your son is interested in top schools, he needs to think about what big questions he wants to study/ponder for the next four years. He'll learn how to read, write, and think critically and then can get his MBA if he wants.
So then explain the ballooning issue of students majoring in economics at all of these top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For an undergraduate education, a business major is completely useless. I don't know why people waste time with a degree in business.
to make big bucks - i know someone went to Wharton and got really nice internship and later a nice paying jobs.
Anonymous wrote:For an undergraduate education, a business major is completely useless. I don't know why people waste time with a degree in business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because top schools are interested in students eager and able to engage with ideas. They do not want to be purely vocational schools for students who have no ambitions or interests beyond making money.
If your son is interested in top schools, he needs to think about what big questions he wants to study/ponder for the next four years. He'll learn how to read, write, and think critically and then can get his MBA if he wants.
So then explain the ballooning issue of students majoring in economics at all of these top schools.
Anonymous wrote:I never went to college so I apologize if this is naive. My kid wants to major in business administration (goal is accounting or investment banking) and wants to go to a top university.
They’re looking at schools like Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, etc. and see that they don’t have business majors. How could this be? It’s the most popular college major and some of these have business schools!
Anonymous wrote:Because top schools are interested in students eager and able to engage with ideas. They do not want to be purely vocational schools for students who have no ambitions or interests beyond making money.
If your son is interested in top schools, he needs to think about what big questions he wants to study/ponder for the next four years. He'll learn how to read, write, and think critically and then can get his MBA if he wants.