<p>just making sure, the first two years of any business bachelors degree are liberal arts courses right, no business courses?</p>
<p>That is generally the same for any bachelors. Your first two years are your general education core classes, usually liberal arts courses, as well as a few prerequisites such as financial and managerial accounting, macro/micro econ, and a business 101 or stats course.</p>
<p>This of course varies.</p>
<p>No, that's incorrect. Four year programs often have business classes from day one. Just depends on the school. What Kulakai describes tends to be the case at state schools but not at all the case everywhere.</p>
<p>wait now I'm confused, does that mean I'm at a disadvantage if I attend a state school (CUNY Baruch or SUNY Old Westbury in particular)?</p>
<p>true.... in schools like Michigan, you have to wait till your junior year to get into Ross school of business to study business major while in NYU, you start your business study from the first year itself</p>
<p>You enter Ross as a sophomore at Michigan.</p>
<p>I'm going into McComb's as a freshman at UT. From my understanding, I can take the courses whenever as long as I do take them and pass them.</p>