<p>Hi! I am a junior and attend a large, well known high school in the suburbs of chicago. Im starting to seriously look into colleges and any opinions on my chances of getting into these business schools would be appreciated. Also, if anyone has any suggestions for top business schools to consider, please reply! Im looking for a great academic school (probably majoring in finance/accounting, not completely sure yet) but I also want college to be an enjoyable experience.</p>
<p>GPA: 4.39 weighted
Class Rank: 25/1160
AP/Honors: AP English III, AP Human Geography, hon bio, hon chem, hon physics, hon alg II/trig, hon precalc, hon english I, hon english II
*I am taking 5 AP classes next year</p>
<p>Extracurriculars:
Business Professionals of America (BPA) 2nd place in state and National competitor, Executive board member of Community service club,
Leader (past 2 years) of school's anti alcohol/drug club
JV softball 2 years
JV/Varsity Golf 3 years</p>
<p>Colleges:
Boston College
Notre Dame
Cornell
University of Virginia
Michigan
Penn
WashU
Northwestern(no undergrad business school)</p>
<p>I forgot to mention my ACT/PSAT scores
ACT (first time taking it): 31
PSAT: 210 </p>
<p>Im taking the SAT in may and I plan on taking the ACT 1-2 more times so hopefully my scores will improve</p>
<p>You should think about adding Emory to that list.</p>
<p>Hi! Sorry, but I was just wondering if it's possible to go to business school right after high school and if that possibility is hard to achieve, because I am really considering going into business or pharmacy, or perhaps somewhere in between? Thanks!</p>
<p>By business school, i am referring to receiving an undergraduate degree in a business related major. I guess "business schools" probably refer more to MBA programs which require a 4 year degree first. Also i think that for pharmacy you generally take general education courses & sciences for the first 2 years and then apply to pharmacy school usually sophmore year. If your interested in pharmacy you might want to look into colleges that have 6 year pharmacy programs so you know your accepted assuming you keep up with their gpa requirements because my cousin is doing this now and it saved her the stress of applying to separate pharmacy schools.</p>