Anonymous wrote:DCUM - Where you get college advice from people who have never heard of Bocconi.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an economist. The Bocconi grads I know are very bright, and, yes, I only know a few.
That said, university and work culture are very different in Italy. Given what my female Italian friends have told me, I wouldn't send a daughter to work there.
Anonymous wrote:I learned something today, as I am in finance (I was an econ major at a T10 uni, and spent early years at GS) and have never heard of it. Not saying it is not well regarded, but in my 30 years in the field in NY and DC, I doubt I’ve met a grad.
But starting from the assumptions that it is an excellent econ program and that your son intends to base his career in the US, I mention 3 things for consideration.
- much US based company internship interviewing occurs on campus soph and junior years, your son will not be as positioned for those internships
- there is value to peer connections made while in college if intending to work in a field like finance, and your son would lack much of that network
- I’d look into if his class choices will be limited, since he could only take those taught in English. (tangentially, I would question the quality if professorship at a university that primarily teaches classes in a language not its home language)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for a good student (3.8 gpa and 1520 sat) looking for Econ options?
not really interested in small schools and won't get into T10s.
Bocconi is an amazing school. My son studied there. He now works at an IB in NYC. Lots of Americans in the program. It is in English and Milan is a great city! He loved every minute of his experience. I would take Bocconi over most US undergraduate business schools in universities ranked over t25…
Anonymous wrote:I'm an economist. The Bocconi grads I know are very bright, and, yes, I only know a few.
That said, university and work culture are very different in Italy. Given what my female Italian friends have told me, I wouldn't send a daughter to work there.
Anonymous wrote:I'm trying to get a sense of how competitive Bocconi undergraduate admission is. My DD is a rising junior and is interested in the school on the international relations/policy/econ track which I think might be a little easier to get into than the finance/business track. She is probably around top 20% of her class at one of the local BIg X private schools. Still working on the SAT (she's a junior) but right now it's in the mid 1400s. Parents are both European.
Anonymous wrote:How do you spell Bucknell in Italian? Bocconi.