Any OOS chose Michigan over your own in-state schools?

<p>No debt is pretty sweet but I think Ross PA will be worth it in the long run. Getting some scholarship money from Mich also helps.</p>

<p>Perhaps....but remember, it is what you make of your education that matters the most. A student at the top of their class is going to land a great job no matter where they went to school. The only schools I feel are worth the money, outside of your state's school, are Ivy League schools. The connections at Ivy's make every other school's connections look mediocre. The connections are great at Michigan, but believe me when I tell you, it is not worth the price you pay OOS.</p>

<p>I'm not sure about other industries but for the top investment banks, b-schools like Ross, Stern, and Wharton are in the group of "target" schools with the ivy league which helps A LOT. Going to a target school isn't an easy ticket to a Goldman Sachs by any means, but it certainly is a big boost compared to non-targets where the chances are slim even with a 4.0. Ironically, getting in from a non-target often requires the heaviest connections. Staying in-state is definitely more cost-effective for many career paths, but I think going OOS was the right call for mine.</p>

<p>Yeah, for Ross, OOS is worth it no matter what your instate school is..(unless you're from cali and go into haas berkeley).</p>

<p>Chose UofM over UC Berkeley.</p>

<p>picked um pa pharm over rutgers pharm.</p>

<p>I'm paying full price OOS and it's been worth every penny. Wouldn't have chosen any other school.</p>

<p>agree. :)</p>

<p>No doubt. I'm sure everyone from my school would choose UMich over UConn. Except for J Bauks of course.</p>

<p>Watch and learn...Big Mikey Wolson is gonna dominate Ross in 2 years. He's gonna get hired from Goldman straight outta college.</p>