Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Wow, what a waste. I bet studying ethics, strategy, communications, management, accounting and all the other stuff that goes with a business degree will never be useful in any organization that person is a part of. /s
Lol. The "ethics", "strategy", "communications", "accounting", etc presented in a Business degree is the most watered-down, barebones outline of those concepts possible. Sort of like the way all kids take "math" in high school, but we know there is a big difference between the "math" presented in AP Calculus BC and some kind of general track 12th grade math.
I really enjoy the stay at home mom arguing about college degrees, it's so cute. Did you major in....interior design or art history?
I’m convinced the PP harping on and on about watered down business degrees is coming from some podunk state uni with an 80% acceptance rate. Her ignorance is alarming
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Wow, what a waste. I bet studying ethics, strategy, communications, management, accounting and all the other stuff that goes with a business degree will never be useful in any organization that person is a part of. /s
Lol. The "ethics", "strategy", "communications", "accounting", etc presented in a Business degree is the most watered-down, barebones outline of those concepts possible. Sort of like the way all kids take "math" in high school, but we know there is a big difference between the "math" presented in AP Calculus BC and some kind of general track 12th grade math.
I really enjoy the stay at home mom arguing about college degrees, it's so cute. Did you major in....interior design or art history?
I’m convinced the PP harping on and on about watered down business degrees is coming from some podunk state uni with an 80% acceptance rate. Her ignorance is alarming
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Wow, what a waste. I bet studying ethics, strategy, communications, management, accounting and all the other stuff that goes with a business degree will never be useful in any organization that person is a part of. /s
Lol. The "ethics", "strategy", "communications", "accounting", etc presented in a Business degree is the most watered-down, barebones outline of those concepts possible. Sort of like the way all kids take "math" in high school, but we know there is a big difference between the "math" presented in AP Calculus BC and some kind of general track 12th grade math.
I really enjoy the stay at home mom arguing about college degrees, it's so cute. Did you major in....interior design or art history?
Anonymous wrote: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.
+1. Because a degree in "business administration" is basically useless. If you're smart enough to get into top schools, you're smart enough to major in econ, finance, or something specific.
At my university, the BS in Business Administration included Finance, Accounting, Marketing, Supply Chain/Operations, and Strategy. I've never seen Finance pulled out as its own degree before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:its not academic its vocational
Like Engineer and CS
like seamstress and chimney sweep, electrician and plumber.
understand now?
nurses, doctors, lawyers.. yep, I get it now.
No, doctors and lawyers have academic backgrounds.
Clearly you don't because you can't see the differences. oh boy.
Lawyers can have studied various subjects in their undergrad including business.
You think an engineer has no academic background? LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Wow, what a waste. I bet studying ethics, strategy, communications, management, accounting and all the other stuff that goes with a business degree will never be useful in any organization that person is a part of. /s
Lol. The "ethics", "strategy", "communications", "accounting", etc presented in a Business degree is the most watered-down, barebones outline of those concepts possible. Sort of like the way all kids take "math" in high school, but we know there is a big difference between the "math" presented in AP Calculus BC and some kind of general track 12th grade math.
I really enjoy the stay at home mom arguing about college degrees, it's so cute. Did you major in....interior design or art history?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Wow, what a waste. I bet studying ethics, strategy, communications, management, accounting and all the other stuff that goes with a business degree will never be useful in any organization that person is a part of. /s
Lol. The "ethics", "strategy", "communications", "accounting", etc presented in a Business degree is the most watered-down, barebones outline of those concepts possible. Sort of like the way all kids take "math" in high school, but we know there is a big difference between the "math" presented in AP Calculus BC and some kind of general track 12th grade math.
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.
+1. Because a degree in "business administration" is basically useless. If you're smart enough to get into top schools, you're smart enough to major in econ, finance, or something specific.
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.
Really? I have an undergraduate business major and my classmates ended up in investment banking, consulting, marketing for large consumer goods firms, etc., none of my classmates with liberal arts degrees ended up in those roles. The engineers and scientists all ended up in their fields, too.
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:Business majors make the most sense for academically advanced kids who want to accelerate their education. Rather than an undergrad Econ major followed by MBA, if they are at a top school, an undergrad business major can provide the equivalent of an MBA.
The best example is a Wharton undergrad degree is viewed as the equivalent of an MBA.
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious as to why Wharton is a BS in Econ with the minimum Econ requirements being Econ one and two? At most schools this would barely get you the BA in Econ.
Anyway, what about schools like UTexas, Ross, or ND that offer BBA….are these not considered prestigious, specifically for business, not talking about other majors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The top undergraduate “business” schools (Penn’s Wharton, MiT sloan) do not have the same middling business degree (BBA) as lesser schools, instead they have a Bachelor of Science in Economics or equivalent. That and the rigorous coursework is why these schools are respected highly for undergrad business-related majors. The curriculum is very similar to a BS in Econ at other ivies or Stanford. There is a reason these schools are top targets.
A “business” BBA degree is not well respected because it is not rigorous
I’m pretty sure Notre Dame Mendoza Bschool confers a BBA….. it’s a top 10 program so, you’re wrong.