Anonymous wrote:I have never heard of a business major getting a PhD.
Anonymous wrote:The goober who started this thread never took an undergraduate level accounting or finance course.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
That isn’t what the data shows at all.
It is. Anybody can any any view. who cares.
You need to have higher stats to get into business program directly.
Some programs don't even offer direct admissions, and you have to apply again in your first and 2nd year.
You need maintain high or near perfect GPA and all the other stuff.
It's just a fact and truth. It's got nothing to do with views.
There are just a limited amount of undergraduate business programs in the country.
Most colleges don’t think it is worth offering undergraduate business degrees in the first place. If you want to be proud of that, go for it.
The overwhelming majority of top colleges do not offer undergrad business degrees. The few that do have limited spots.
Half of T25 schools have it. Rice recently began undergrad business program. Brown started business track.
If schools have it, it's considered competitive prestigious programs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
That isn’t what the data shows at all.
It is. Anybody can any any view. who cares.
You need to have higher stats to get into business program directly.
Some programs don't even offer direct admissions, and you have to apply again in your first and 2nd year.
You need maintain high or near perfect GPA and all the other stuff.
It's just a fact and truth. It's got nothing to do with views.
There are just a limited amount of undergraduate business programs in the country.
Most colleges don’t think it is worth offering undergraduate business degrees in the first place. If you want to be proud of that, go for it.
The overwhelming majority of top colleges do not offer undergrad business degrees. The few that do have limited spots.
Anonymous wrote:The average business major is not a genius, but neither is the average psychology major.
Except for the very best undergraduate business programs - UPenn, Georgetown, Michigan, UVA - undergraduate business programs are intellectually weak. That is, they don’t really encourage critical thinking or develop writing and research skills. Instead, they mostly teach toolkit skills that can be applied to business.
The best programs also require two years of liberal arts and apply business teachings through rigorous case studies, sometimes ones sponsored by Fortune 500 firms. Those case studies challenge students to apply what they’ve learned in an unstructured environment - I.e., they must solve real-life problems. These kids go to high-end employers , like McKinsey, Goldman, and FANG.
However, even kids who go to great undergraduate business programs are less intellectual/more practical than peers who major in philosophy, for example. It’s not that such business majors are dumb, but they do want application, and oftentimes, a quick pathway to a lucrative career in high-end consulting or finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
That isn’t what the data shows at all.
It is. Anybody can any any view. who cares.
You need to have higher stats to get into business program directly.
Some programs don't even offer direct admissions, and you have to apply again in your first and 2nd year.
You need maintain high or near perfect GPA and all the other stuff.
It's just a fact and truth. It's got nothing to do with views.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
That isn’t what the data shows at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
It's not about views.
We go by data.
In 2024, if a school has Business program, it's more competitive and harder to get in. It produces better outcomes.
Thus students in the business programs are smarter on the average.
Anonymous wrote:The average business major is not a genius, but neither is the average psychology major.
Except for the very best undergraduate business programs - UPenn, Georgetown, Michigan, UVA - undergraduate business programs are intellectually weak. That is, they don’t really encourage critical thinking or develop writing and research skills. Instead, they mostly teach toolkit skills that can be applied to business.
The best programs also require two years of liberal arts and apply business teachings through rigorous case studies, sometimes ones sponsored by Fortune 500 firms. Those case studies challenge students to apply what they’ve learned in an unstructured environment - I.e., they must solve real-life problems. These kids go to high-end employers , like McKinsey, Goldman, and FANG.
However, even kids who go to great undergraduate business programs are less intellectual/more practical than peers who major in philosophy, for example. It’s not that such business majors are dumb, but they do want application, and oftentimes, a quick pathway to a lucrative career in high-end consulting or finance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.
You can live in denial or try to better understand multiple opposing views.
Anonymous wrote:Old timers still living in the 70s, please stop posting.