<p>No santa clara u. :(</p>
<p>undergrad business rankings are just silly.... I know so many kids who graduated from schools not on that list that have much better jobs than those who went to the ranked schools..... going to a top notch school may get you the great entry level job... but believe me when I tell you, it doesn't matter where you went to school after a year or two working.... you need to constantly prove yourself worthy of advancing....</p>
<p>I agree with Omnescient1 about the needing to prove yourself once on the job. However, I also believe that it helps to have gone to a school that can teach the basics that get you that great job opportunity to begin with. That's why people are interested in these lists, and in attending these particular schools.</p>
<p>P.S. Regarding Indiana not being worthy of its spot, people should know that Indiana's business school was ranked #1 for top business faculty by Princeton Review (at both the undergraduate and graduate level) for the past two years. Stanford ranked 2nd on this ranking and Harvard came in 9th. Among Indiana's well-known business alumni: John Chambers, CEO of Cisco Systems; and Mark Cuban, Owner of the Dallas Mavericks Basketball Team and former CEO at Broadcast.com, the first company to broadcast audio via webcasting.</p>
<p>Hmm so how high do you think I'd be able to (junior) transfer from CCC with 3.56 GPA with upward grade trend (hopefully at 3.7 after fall q)/48.5 quarter units, CA resident given good essays/decent ECs/prereqs done</p>
<p>how can you say one ranking is more accurate then another... they are all just opinion....</p>
<p>Texas A&M moved up 3 spots, nice. I remember that between 2007 and 2008, we went from 50 to 31 in the business week rankings.</p>
<p>Does anyone have the 2009 US News undergraduate finance rankings?</p>
<p>anbody know where umass amherst - isenberg school of management stands?</p>
<p>what about U Chicago?
If Chicago is good at economics, then why does it suck at business?</p>
<p>The University of Chicago does not have an undergraduate business major, and the set of students interested in going into business and the set of students interested in economics don't necessarily intersect. (It's like assuming that all kids who like science want to go to med school).</p>