<p>I was looking online and i think i saw that they have an undergrad business program. can anyone confrom this/ give me some more information on their business school? </p>
<p>I know it is a newer school, so does anyone know how good this school ranks?</p>
<p>and if they accept transfer students from other universities?</p>
<p>it’s only a minor for undergraduate studies. WP Carey School of business or the Center for Leadership Education. The real b-school is located in downtown baltimore, designed just for incoming MBAs. It’s still a very very new program. </p>
<p>I suggest that if you are really serious about b-school, you should look at others with a longer, more established reputation such as Wharton.</p>
<p>With regard to studying business at Hopkins, a distinction between institutions needs to be made.</p>
<p>First, you have the Homewood campus of Johns Hopkins University which is home to the undergraduate schools of Arts and Science and Engineering. When people discuss Johns Hopkins University undergraduate programs they are almost always discussing the Homewood schools. Between these schools there is no specific business major. Your options would include an Economics major, and minors in Entrepreneurship and Management or Financial Economics. These are not business management programs like other schools that offer business programs. Here are a couple guest blogs about business-related programs at the Homewood schools:</p>
<p>There is also the new Carey School of Business. This is more of a non-traditional school with primary focus on an MBA program. However, the school does offer undergraduate programs. You can learn more about those programs here:
[Johns</a> Hopkins Carey Business School Undergraduate Program](<a href=“http://carey.jhu.edu/our_programs/ugprogram/]Johns”>http://carey.jhu.edu/our_programs/ugprogram/)</p>
<p>I have a very good friend who graduated from Hopkins a few years ago, and is now at Harvard Business School. He was also accepted to Wharton and Stanford.</p>
<p>Also keep in mind that going to business school is often not about what one learns in class but rather about the networks and relationships that one will establish outside of class. </p>
<p>One of my business professors at Hopkins once told me a simple example: if you want to get a top quality business education, go to Dartmouth. But people still flock in the thousands to HBS not because of its education quality, but rather the powerful network of harvard alums that one will have complete access to after MBA. I’m an entrepreneur myself and I’m in the process of starting my own business right now. I can testify that having the right contacts and relationships is probably one of the most critical things to the success of a business. </p>
<p>Hopkins’ business program is relatively young. I do hope that, as time passes by, it will improve in both quality and reputation. In the mean time, this should not prevent you from coming to hopkins as an undergraduate student and major in other business or non-business related subjects that can can equally prepare you for the rigors of post-graduation work and mba.</p>