Best Undergrad business rankings?

<p>Which Undergraduate business rankings are best from an academic standpoint? The rankings I have seen all seem to be quite different so which one is most accurate?</p>

<p>I usually like to use [Best</a> Undergraduate Business Schools 2011 - Businessweek](<a href=“Bloomberg - Are you a robot?”>Bloomberg - Are you a robot?)
but that puts Wharton at 4, which I consider inaccurate. There are specific categories for Teaching quality grade and academic quality grade which you can use. </p>

<p>I also like these ones [Best</a> Undergraduate Business Schools | Top Undergraduate Business Programs | US News Best Colleges](<a href=“http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business]Best”>http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business) because they show you the best overall and the best for each specialty.</p>

<p>I agree with dfree, I find us news most helpful as they rank schools for each type of business school. But they only give you the top 10</p>

<p>Those BusinessWeek rankings are very interesting - certainly not very accurate.</p>

<p>I would say the best business schools are:</p>

<p>1) Wharton
2) Michigan
3) Berkeley
4) NYU
5) Virginia
6) Georgetown
7) UT Austin
8) UNC-CH
9) Emory
10) WashU
11) Notre Dame</p>

<p>All of these business schools are really good though. These are generally viewed as being the best.</p>

<p>^^^ the above list is fine, but put every Ivy and an econ degree on that also. Many top schools don’t have UG business programs.</p>

<p>^^ He is listed undergrad business schools… nothing about econ</p>

<p>I obviously saw that. The point is many top schools do not have a business school and students instead get an econ degree. If you think #2 Michigan Ross does better than unlisted Harvard econ you are crazy.</p>

<p>Econ is fine. Im interested in going into econ just as much as business so its all helpful.</p>

<p>“I obviously saw that. The point is many top schools do not have a business school and students instead get an econ degree. If you think #2 Michigan Ross does better than unlisted Harvard econ you are crazy.”</p>

<p>Actually the point is that this is a forum for “business majors.”</p>

<p>Actually, the point is that econ is also a business major. Just as the countless people working in finance who majored in econ. </p>

<p>How on earth can this even be an argument. You cannot look at a list of top UG business schools without factoring that many top institutions do not have UG business schools. Students at those schools choose to get econ degrees in lieu of a finance/accounting degree.</p>

<p>Since no one is commenting on my thread i have a question for you all…</p>

<p>I have been looking at what I could major in undergrad that would satisfy all my wants. I love computing, I love economics, and I love management. I came up with this double major (Management Information Systems and International Business in Economics). I am firmly planted in majoring in MIS, but with all my transfer credits from being duel enrolled in high school I am having trouble picking my second major. Would this be applicable to the job marketplace or should I pick a different complement to MIS?</p>