Anonymous wrote:Undergrad business is meh because real world experience is valuable before business school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are some very old timers saying Econ, but in reality if the schools have business programs they are almost always harder to even get in and more prestigious.
For example, UPenn, Cornell, Notre Dame, NYU, Georgetown, Berkeley, UVA, Emory, etc. etc.
For many schools you even have to apply again to the business program in your freshman or sophomore year.
“Old timers.” The most prestigious schools don’t even have business programs.
Anonymous wrote:There are some very old timers saying Econ, but in reality if the schools have business programs they are almost always harder to even get in and more prestigious.
For example, UPenn, Cornell, Notre Dame, NYU, Georgetown, Berkeley, UVA, Emory, etc. etc.
For many schools you even have to apply again to the business program in your freshman or sophomore year.
Econ unless there's a separate business school with a significantly lower acceptance rate.Anonymous wrote:Curious if people have opinions here
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which business major? I’m not a fan of General business, management, marketing (especially if lacking math) for undergrad. Accounting and finance can be ok, depending on the school. On the Econ major, depends if the student wants a liberal arts education. And Econ at the top schools is much better than at most schools. Look for programs where calculus is required for the Econ major.
I desperately wish Econ programs would cement themselves into the liberal arts and prepare their students more towards graduate education than the workforce. I know it’s unrealistic, but most economics graduates do not have anywhere close to enough math.
There are a few Econ phd programs that take more applicants from math and physics departments than Econ ones. Linear+Calc 1-3 should be the minimum.