<p>Attending a business school does not mean you have to head to Wall Street right after.</p>
<p>And I would love to see some figures to back up that claim.</p>
<p>Attending a business school does not mean you have to head to Wall Street right after.</p>
<p>And I would love to see some figures to back up that claim.</p>
<p>Here’s either Citi or BAML’s SA list from a previous year
</p>
<p>MS SA List from a previous year</p>
<p>
[Quote]
Uber-Targets:
Harvard </p>
<p>Would probably be better if you displayed data from all large IBs than a select few.</p>
<p>eh, not a match for Tufts, still…</p>
<p>regardless, you need to try to get to the 2200s on your SAT or the equivalent for the ACT if you want good chances at most of your list.</p>
<p>^^ Try reading the last few sentences of my previous post. Anyways, your data?</p>
<p>Stern is so over-hyped. Haha, Stern kids like to think that they’re Ivy-caliber. Biggest joke of the century, lol.
But yeah, I have to admit, Stern does place better than Emory and UVA. That’s just common knowledge.</p>
<p>^ I agree that it’s over-hyped. The sheer number of Stern students getting offers doesn’t change the fact that essentially the entire graduating class at Stern is looking to break into Wall Street.</p>
<p>2100s SAT is not a match for Tufts. It’s competitive, but I wouldn’t call it a match.</p>
<p>When people are talking about the merits of NYU Stern recruiting why do they leave out the fact that its the worst college experience in the country?</p>
<p>^Oh yeah, going to college at NYU is such a terrible experience. You think that’s why it gets the most applications of any private school in the country and is many people’s top choice and dream school? Since when is non-traditional a synonym for terrible? Open your mind pal. I’m not a supporter of undergraduate business, but in what it does, Stern is top notch and that really cannot be disputed. Its firm placement is on par with Ivies and superior to many elite institutions.</p>
<p>Yeah but I would argue most of those people don’t know what they are getting into. No campus, not a real college social life, very little loyalty, bureaucratic. You miss out on pretty much everything that makes college special. Look there are some people who are a good fit for the place but I think for many its a mistake.</p>
<p>^You re-assert a frequently stated point by folks around CC. It’s not an argument of superiority/inferiority because it is just a completely different experience altogether. I personally don’t see what’s so special about everything you mentioned regarding the traditional college experience – I do recognize that it is beneficial for many people, but not for me. Same frats, same quad, same cafeteria, same people day in and day out? Sounds boring lol. You’re right that many people do not know what they’re getting into when coming here, but for even more people, they know exactly what they’re getting into and can’t imagine being anywhere else.</p>
<p>Anyways, back on topic, I think that the OP’s schools are generally low reaches.</p>