Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need a Masters unless you want to be a lobbyist assistant.
This just isn't true.
Anonymous wrote:If you need to look lower down the rankings, Syracuse's Maxwell School is quite good.
Anonymous wrote:Be in DC and intern. Georgetown, American, GW.
Anonymous wrote:UMD, UMBC and GMU all offer 5th year masters programs which could potentially be done in 4 years if you come in with all of the AP credits kids are getting these days. Shouldn't just be the barbell kids from ivies setting policy in the future..
Anonymous wrote:My DS is at UVA in the Batten school for public policy and has loved it. Just finished his second internship in public policy in DC.
Anonymous wrote:You need a Masters unless you want to be a lobbyist assistant.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-public-affairs-schools/public-policy-analysis-rankings
Berkeley
Michigan
Chicago
Harvard
Indiana
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Only one person mentioned Cornell - and said it’s a hard no. Why?
Anyone else have experience with Public Policy at Cornell? Looks like students apply specifically to the Brooks School.
DP. The Cornell Brooks School is new. Classes started in Fall 2021. It was created out of Human Ecology to be a stand-alone admitting unit. Policies and programs are evolving.
https://cornellsun.com/2023/05/03/a-major-switch-pam-major-in-college-of-human-ecology-to-become-public-policy-major-in-jeb-e-brooks-school-of-public-policy/
Anonymous wrote:Only one person mentioned Cornell - and said it’s a hard no. Why?
Anyone else have experience with Public Policy at Cornell? Looks like students apply specifically to the Brooks School.
Anonymous wrote:My college Freshmen just went thru this.
Applied to:
Georgetown
Pomona
UVA
W&M
Princeton
Brown
Harvard
Tufts
Hopkins
GW
Yale
Indiana and Michigan also strong- but didn't like either--wanted smaller school.
Did get into all but Yale and WL at Harvard and Princeton. Thought all but one were total reaches just on acceptance rates.