Best UGrad Colleges for jobs on Wall Street

<p>it sounds like a great school especially for instate students although trying to find an apartment may be a task does anyone know if they have connections with any other schools dorms? or what it would cost to live in nyc with roomates?</p>

<p>"In New York City, it is by far the best known undergraduate business program. The Zicklin School of Business at Baruch is the largest business school in the U.S. "</p>

<p>Um.. what about Stern? Cornell's AES? Columbia (though that's econ).</p>

<p>Yup. Baruch, with 15,000 undergraduates, most in business, and supplying the largest number of business-related interns, etc. in New York is better known than Stern, much better known than AES, and Columbia doesn't even have one.</p>

<p>The biggest difference is that Stern (a much smaller school) has many, many wealthy students from out of state prepared to fork over $50k a year.</p>

<p>AES isnt that well-known.</p>

<p>it's a PROGRAM. Cornell doesnt have an undergraduate school for business.</p>

<p>Guys I stand no chance at Columbia, Cornell, or NYU, please help me pick more colleges for business? So far I have</p>

<p>CMU
RIT
CUNY Baruch
Fordham</p>

<p>any others?</p>

<p>U.Pittsburgh?</p>

<p>heavy wallstreet recruiting there?</p>

<p>Maryland and Penn State</p>

<p>if u stand no chance at cornell, odds arent favorable for CMU tepper...alot of state schools have solid undergrad biz programs like indiana and penn state but id just do econ anywhere else, im not a fan of undergrad biz</p>

<p>ill accept that, my list so far of colleges i want to go to are</p>

<p>CMU(super reach)
RIT(match - maybe ill go ED)
CUNY Baruch</p>

<p>and maybe fordham, i dont like the area too much around there, not the most friendly to white people</p>

<p>RIT Ed won't help you much. CMU ED will probably get your foot in the door if anything.</p>

<p>Hofstra has a very large business school; it is out on Long Island, 30-40 minutes by train to downtown. Pace is a long-standing reputation for business internships in the city (my father was a graduate). Quinnipiac is an up-and-coming place, apparently with lots of international business connections.</p>

<p>I heard Pace was a school where anyone could get in and that you could never get a job on Wall Street from there because of low education quality an bad busness contacts?</p>

<p>I will look into Hofstra.</p>

<p>how about a compiled list? Privates, LACs, and Publics. And not just schools that might have sent a couple people to Wall Street, schools that are heavily recruited. Yes/No? Just an idea....</p>

<p>It's not so simple. You might better ask whether heavy recruitment from a private offsets more limited recruitment from a school for a student who might already have several years of Wall Street experience. As someone who was an employer myself, I think it is hard to overestimate the premium placed on experience.</p>

<p>The Business board has just such a list</p>

<p><a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=75179%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=75179&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>from this, I have erased all of my previous colleges, because they don't seem to be recruited at all. So far I have</p>

<p>Purdue
IU - Kelley</p>

<p>I want to make it major in investment banking or some similiar job with a lot of work and money. These 2 colleges seem to have good recruiting but you need very high GPAs.</p>

<p>Bump =] =] =]</p>

<p>Duh. They don't have to recruit at your school if you already have a job.</p>