Building my college list..

<p>Hi! I'm looking for schools that have an undergrad business program with a film minor available. (Or major in film, and minor in business.. haven't quite decided on that..) So this is what I got so far:
NYU (Match?
USC (Match?)
UPenn (reach!!)
Emerson (could this be a safety?)
UCLA (does this have ANY business majors/minors available undergrad?)
BU (safety)
UCBerkeley(Reach?)</p>

<p>So my stats are reasonable. I got a 2100 on SAT. 4s and 5s on all of my APs.. (euro, u.s., gov/eco, lit, lang, chem) and i am taking almost all of the honors classes that are available to me. I am president of a community service club, Secretary of the business club, and i am also a member of other clubs. Thanks to anyone who will reply!</p>

<p>What is your GPA? </p>

<p>UCLA only offers “biz-econ” and does not have an undergraduate business school.</p>

<p>Note that UC Berkeley’s Haas business school is extremely competitive, and if you are accepted to Cal, you are not automatically accepted into Haas. </p>

<p>Not too sure about Emerson, but BU sounds like a decent safety.</p>

<p>Thanks for your response! Sorry about forgetting my GPA… It’s 3.9 UW</p>

<p>Cost constraints, financial aid situation, and state of residency?</p>

<p>NYU and BU are known for high cost and poor financial aid. The UCs have good financial aid for in-state students, but will not cover the $23,000 per year additional out-of-state tuition with financial aid. Try the net price calculator on each school’s web site.</p>

<p>Anyone else?? Thanks to everyone again for replying!</p>

<p>Oh and I would not need financial aid. Also, my home state is CA…</p>

<p>William and Mary has a great business school. Cornell has a very strong econ/business program. Good luck!</p>

<p>Does Chapman offer a film minor?</p>

<p>I would add Boston College (reach) and Northeastern University (target) to your list.</p>

<p>I’m just guessing but it might be hard to do business and film at the same time? Especially at a very large school.</p>

<p>Look at Florida State University, excellent in film, very strong in Business, located in Florida’s State Capitol, Tallahassee. It is a beautiful campus.</p>

<p>Ok thanks everyone! Now I’m considering Northeastern, FSU, and Chapman as well. I’m not considering Boston college because I’ve heard it’s very religious and I’m not religious…</p>

<p>butler university …probably a very good fit!
[About</a> Our Program - Butler University](<a href=“About Butler | No. 1 Regional University in the Midwest”>http://www.butler.edu/creative-media-entertainment/about-our-program/)</p>

<p>Butler is also started fairly christian.</p>

<p>informative…butler is not a religious school…where did you get that?</p>

<p>Informative has never been out of Boston. He’s truly one of the least informative posters on CC. He just makes up stuff about colleges in other regions. And no, Butler isn’t religious.</p>

<p>Have you visited Chapman Univ? Good for business and film. </p>

<p>Not sure if LMU has film, but I’m thinking that it does. lol</p>

<p>I’m just guessing but it might be hard to do business and film at the same time? Especially at a very large school.</p>

<p>I don’t think so. There are a number of kids at my kids’ undergrad who do both business and film. (I know, odd, film in Alabama. But the South has become a frequent location for production of film and commercials.)</p>

<p>I think Emerson is a great fit for your needs and stats. How about Carnegie Mellon?
There is a separate forum for Visual Arts and Film majors that will have more suggestions - <a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/visual-arts-film-majors/[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/visual-arts-film-majors/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>My D has been looking for a similar combination. You might also check out University of Miami.</p>

<p>LMU has a film studies minor, or major in film and minor in business. Most minors at LMU are less than 20 semester hours, so quite doable. Keep in mind that film majors at many of the schools you mentioned are not safeties for anyone, with competitive admissions.</p>