Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
None are bad options. The academic differences are marginal.
It's more about fit, environment, specific major, and where they want to pursue a career.
All three are regional schools. So be mindful of that. Wisconsin is going to play better in Chicago. Maryland in the mid-Atlantic. Georgia in Atlanta and the South.
Exactly. More accurately, they aren't regional schools but rather they have a very strong reputation in their region compared to nationally. This means top companies in their region will recruit there, top companies outside of that region wouldn't necessarily do so. Most students also end up settling in the same region of the country.
As opposed to a school like Berkeley or Michigan, who have a strong reputation nationally and even internationally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
None are bad options. The academic differences are marginal.
It's more about fit, environment, specific major, and where they want to pursue a career.
All three are regional schools. So be mindful of that. Wisconsin is going to play better in Chicago. Maryland in the mid-Atlantic. Georgia in Atlanta and the South.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
None are bad options. The academic differences are marginal.
It's more about fit, environment, specific major, and where they want to pursue a career.
All three are regional schools. So be mindful of that. Wisconsin is going to play better in Chicago. Maryland in the mid-Atlantic. Georgia in Atlanta and the South.
Anonymous wrote:Your bigger-name business schools will send kids all over the country (think top 10ish). But for a kid who really wants Chicago, your best bet would be a school like Northwestern, ND, Indiana, etc. These are the schools that area employers know best and will prioritize. Kids from lower-ranked business schools in other regions will have a slightly tougher road. Same goes for other big cities.
Anonymous wrote:Seems Midwest Nyc would look at northwestern or uchicago or nyu vs wisconsin.
And ATL would use Emory over UGA?
And mid Atlantic uva over UMD, no?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
None are bad options. The academic differences are marginal.
It's more about fit, environment, specific major, and where they want to pursue a career.
All three are regional schools. So be mindful of that. Wisconsin is going to play better in Chicago. Maryland in the mid-Atlantic. Georgia in Atlanta and the South.
Thanks. This stresses me out. Ha. Can't he apply for internships anywhere. Or through people we know. I get that it's easier with the area closest but what if a kid only gets into one of those or let's say UGA is the better fit but they won't want to stay in the south but wants Chicago etc. I feel like these days everything is more global and online or who you know?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
None are bad options. The academic differences are marginal.
It's more about fit, environment, specific major, and where they want to pursue a career.
All three are regional schools. So be mindful of that. Wisconsin is going to play better in Chicago. Maryland in the mid-Atlantic. Georgia in Atlanta and the South.
Anonymous wrote:For business. Any opinions? Ignoring costs for now.
Anonymous wrote:UGA is the easy choice here. Go Dawgs! Sic 'em! Woof woof!