I got accepted to Penn state, Purdue University ( Krannert Management), Indiana University, Bentley College and some Cunies ( Baruch and Queen College). And I am still waiting on some other colleges before I make my final decision. I am planning to major in business when I get into college. Although I live in NyC which is over populated city, I have attended to small schools all my life. I love being in a small school because I am to develop very good relationships with my teachers. Which one of these school do you guys think is the best for me?
<p>I personally would go with Bentley - not too far from home, smallish school, focus on business. My next choice on your list would be Indiana - even though it is a huge school, they do a decent job of trying to make it feel smaller for students. It has an awesome business program. Of course, if you want to work in NYC, one of the City colleges is also an option but you won't get to experience a different part of the country or have the traditional college experience as much. But again, these are just my personal choices --- you may have an entirely different set of criteria than I do, so trust your gut instinct on which school feels "right" for you.</p>
<p>Congratulations on all of your acceptances - you really can't go wrong with any of them.</p>
<p>yeah Bentley has a solid reputation in the Boston area. Although the other programs might be higher ranked you should think about where you should fit in and if it is the smaller environment then Bentley would be your best bet. If you succeed you will have the same opportunities and in all likelihood better ones then those who go to higher ranked programs but don't do as well as planned.</p>
<p>Even though I'm a Purdue alumni and bleed Old Gold & Black, I'm not sure if it would the best fit if you're looking for a small school and close relationships with the faculty. Purdue is huge, around 30,000 on campus, and it's basically in the middle of no where for surrounding area. I've heard very good things about the Krannert program, but that's usually been about their graduate program, so I don't know about undergrad. It sounds like you would be going to a polar opposite of where you've been, a big city and small school to a rural school that's very big.</p>