Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BS in Econ from a top liberal arts college will include accounting and is typically much more rigorous than a BS in Business Admin. The difference is in amount of calculus required. Econ majors at my DC's school go straight to Wall Street and major banks. Unless you're studying at Wharton, I recommend an Econ degree over one in Business Admin in almost every scenario.
You are totally wrong.
If the school has undergrad business program, it's usually more difficult to get in and more valuable.
I disagree. You clearly heave never studied admission stats for top SLACs vs business programs. You also clearly haven't looked at the curricula. Research is key BEFORE you speak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BS in Econ from a top liberal arts college will include accounting and is typically much more rigorous than a BS in Business Admin. The difference is in amount of calculus required. Econ majors at my DC's school go straight to Wall Street and major banks. Unless you're studying at Wharton, I recommend an Econ degree over one in Business Admin in almost every scenario.
You are totally wrong.
If the school has undergrad business program, it's usually more difficult to get in and more valuable.
I disagree. You clearly heave never studied admission stats for top SLACs vs business programs. You also clearly haven't looked at the curricula. Research is key BEFORE you speak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BS in Econ from a top liberal arts college will include accounting and is typically much more rigorous than a BS in Business Admin. The difference is in amount of calculus required. Econ majors at my DC's school go straight to Wall Street and major banks. Unless you're studying at Wharton, I recommend an Econ degree over one in Business Admin in almost every scenario.
You are totally wrong.
If the school has undergrad business program, it's usually more difficult to get in and more valuable.
I disagree. You clearly heave never studied admission stats for top SLACs vs business programs. You also clearly haven't looked at the curricula. Research is key BEFORE you speak.
Anonymous wrote:OP, many small liberal arts colleges offer business majors these days. Look into those. Skidmore, Dickinson, Gettysburg, Puget Sound, Union, Claremont McKenna, Beloit, Bucknell, W&L, Rollins, F&M, etc. No need to apply to one specific program, he’ll get a grounding in the liberal arts with room to change his mind, but he can also major (or in many cases minor) in business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BS in Econ from a top liberal arts college will include accounting and is typically much more rigorous than a BS in Business Admin. The difference is in amount of calculus required. Econ majors at my DC's school go straight to Wall Street and major banks. Unless you're studying at Wharton, I recommend an Econ degree over one in Business Admin in almost every scenario.
You are totally wrong.
If the school has undergrad business program, it's usually more difficult to get in and more valuable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traditionally, a Business Administration degree has always been looked down upon. But these days, there are quite a few very desirable undergraduate business schools - Penn, NYU, Michigan, Berkeley, Notre Dame, Georgetown, Indiana and a few others. I would not get a business degree from a random school. Typically, people will study Econ with maybe a minor in something else that's relevant. But be mindful that Econ is very math heavy. Most schools, regardless of major, will require a liberal arts core of classes.
Past is irrelevant.
Humanities degrees are looked down upon in our times.
+1 why do you think LACs are now offering business degrees, and why this degree is usually an impacted major in most of the colleges?
^PP still lives in the past.
Anonymous wrote:OP, many small liberal arts colleges offer business majors these days. Look into those. Skidmore, Dickinson, Gettysburg, Puget Sound, Union, Claremont McKenna, Beloit, Bucknell, W&L, Rollins, F&M, etc. No need to apply to one specific program, he’ll get a grounding in the liberal arts with room to change his mind, but he can also major (or in many cases minor) in business.
Anonymous wrote:My kid has no idea what he wants to major in (11th grade) and I’m trying to understand what sorts of jobs kids get after college. It sounds like people are talking about investment banking, finance (but not becoming an accountant?) and management consulting. Is that right? That is not the path my kid will want. I think he may end up starting/owning/running a sports-related business, if I had to guess.
There simply aren’t that many jobs on walls street etc to justify all these business majors, right? What to these kids do when they graduate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traditionally, a Business Administration degree has always been looked down upon. But these days, there are quite a few very desirable undergraduate business schools - Penn, NYU, Michigan, Berkeley, Notre Dame, Georgetown, Indiana and a few others. I would not get a business degree from a random school. Typically, people will study Econ with maybe a minor in something else that's relevant. But be mindful that Econ is very math heavy. Most schools, regardless of major, will require a liberal arts core of classes.
Past is irrelevant.
Humanities degrees are looked down upon in our times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has no idea what he wants to major in (11th grade) and I’m trying to understand what sorts of jobs kids get after college. It sounds like people are talking about investment banking, finance (but not becoming an accountant?) and management consulting. Is that right? That is not the path my kid will want. I think he may end up starting/owning/running a sports-related business, if I had to guess.
There simply aren’t that many jobs on walls street etc to justify all these business majors, right? What to these kids do when they graduate?
It has to do with every type and every single business. So ton of different types and amounts of opportunities
So you a kid will get hired as an entry level project manager at a construction company, or an insurance company or a hospital or something? Perfectly fine jobs. But you can also get those same jobs with a BA in marketing or communications or biology. Am I misunderstanding?
Assuming the same school, you'll have tougher time finding a job with those majors.
Anonymous wrote:Traditionally, a Business Administration degree has always been looked down upon. But these days, there are quite a few very desirable undergraduate business schools - Penn, NYU, Michigan, Berkeley, Notre Dame, Georgetown, Indiana and a few others. I would not get a business degree from a random school. Typically, people will study Econ with maybe a minor in something else that's relevant. But be mindful that Econ is very math heavy. Most schools, regardless of major, will require a liberal arts core of classes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has no idea what he wants to major in (11th grade) and I’m trying to understand what sorts of jobs kids get after college. It sounds like people are talking about investment banking, finance (but not becoming an accountant?) and management consulting. Is that right? That is not the path my kid will want. I think he may end up starting/owning/running a sports-related business, if I had to guess.
There simply aren’t that many jobs on walls street etc to justify all these business majors, right? What to these kids do when they graduate?
It has to do with every type and every single business. So ton of different types and amounts of opportunities
So you a kid will get hired as an entry level project manager at a construction company, or an insurance company or a hospital or something? Perfectly fine jobs. But you can also get those same jobs with a BA in marketing or communications or biology. Am I misunderstanding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has no idea what he wants to major in (11th grade) and I’m trying to understand what sorts of jobs kids get after college. It sounds like people are talking about investment banking, finance (but not becoming an accountant?) and management consulting. Is that right? That is not the path my kid will want. I think he may end up starting/owning/running a sports-related business, if I had to guess.
There simply aren’t that many jobs on walls street etc to justify all these business majors, right? What to these kids do when they graduate?
It has to do with every type and every single business. So ton of different types and amounts of opportunities
Anonymous wrote:My kid has no idea what he wants to major in (11th grade) and I’m trying to understand what sorts of jobs kids get after college. It sounds like people are talking about investment banking, finance (but not becoming an accountant?) and management consulting. Is that right? That is not the path my kid will want. I think he may end up starting/owning/running a sports-related business, if I had to guess.
There simply aren’t that many jobs on walls street etc to justify all these business majors, right? What to these kids do when they graduate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Traditionally, a Business Administration degree has always been looked down upon. But these days, there are quite a few very desirable undergraduate business schools - Penn, NYU, Michigan, Berkeley, Notre Dame, Georgetown, Indiana and a few others. I would not get a business degree from a random school. Typically, people will study Econ with maybe a minor in something else that's relevant. But be mindful that Econ is very math heavy. Most schools, regardless of major, will require a liberal arts core of classes.
Except that at a random school, business degree especially accounting, finance, analytics, MIS are still much better than history psychology English communications. etc. or even econ