<p>What's The Best Business School In The Us???</p>
<p>The University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business</p>
<p>2nd tier after Wharton includes but is not limited to:</p>
<p>Berkeley--Haas
MIT--Sloan
Ann Arbor
NYU--Stern</p>
<p>yea. Wharton in U-penn is the best</p>
<p>i would say wharton followed by sloan..and some of others which include rose,stern,hass,tepper,marshall,and NU(i dont know how to spell the specific name of program exactly...)</p>
<p>i wouldn't call those schools second tier!! lol</p>
<p>they are almost on the same level as wharton, but not quite</p>
<p>mcintire is excellent as well</p>
<p>Essentially any of the schools in the top 50 will provide a great undergrad business education. But the schools mentioned are considered the best.</p>
<p>the above statement may be true or may not be true, but it would be much better if you went to a top undergrad b-school</p>
<p>Actually for consulting and finance (usually the most desired post0undergrad business jobs) the top placement doesn;t come from the business schools necessarily. An econ major from HYPS, MIT, Dartmouth, Columbia, Duke, Amherst, Williams and a few others will be better for recruiting than almost every business school except Wharton.</p>
<p>Northwestern MMSS also has extremely strong business placement.</p>
<p>UPenn Wharton and Cornell AEM are the only 2 accredited Ivy League Business Schools so u can't go wrong either way (altho Wharton is best)</p>
<p>Cornell AEM is not an undergrad business school. It's only a major within the "Farm School".</p>
<p>Cornell has a "real" business school, Johnson, but it offers no undergraduate programs.</p>
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Northwestern MMSS also has extremely strong business placement.
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<p>northwestern MMSS as well as economics has better job placement than most of the aforementioned schools, including much of the lower ivy league</p>
<p>That's because MMSS is an honor program of sorts. If other top schools did the same thing and allowed such a selective-of-already-admitted-students program to exist i doubt they'd do worse. MMSS is a good program, but its placement rate is not entirely due to its own academic merits, so that aspect should not be overestimated.</p>
<p>i was mainly referring to economics, which is not an honors program, it is one of the most, possibly THE most, popular majors in the school of arts and sciences.</p>
<p>The top schools are already more selective and have that advantage in recruiting. Such programs just level the field a bit.</p>
<p>Are you kidding me bicoastal? AEM is #10 undergrad business school in businessweek and #11 in US News. It was developed as a farm school originally because that was one of the pillars of business way back in the day. Now it's a business school. </p>
<p>It's always fun to challenge someone about a fact about the school they go to...</p>
<h1>10, 11 isn't that strong a showing in this category. The top business schools become far less reputable after the first few. You'd be much better off with an econ major from an elite school.</h1>
<p>^^^</p>
<p>.... Got anything to back that up?</p>