<p>According to Businessweek (the gold standard in your opinion):
The top internship recruiters at Tulane business 2007-2008 were
Merrill Lynch
*Goldman Sachs Group
Morgan Stanley
Deloitte Touche Tomatsu
Ernst & Young
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
PricewaterhouseCoopers </p>
<p>So yet again you’re misinformed. </p>
<p>Again, I’m not suggesting that you are bashing the school per se, but I think you are just ill-informed. I’m not pushing Tulane either, just correcting what was stated about the school and the reputation in the field. Also, the ranking I mentioned was for FINANCE which addresses the issue of reputation on Wall Street (where i work i might add.) I never said a kid should leave New York to pursue a degree in business. However, since schools well outside of New York were mentioned, then Tulane was brought up and then derided, I decided to correct the ill-informed. I don’t always recommend my alma mater, but I DO correct people who clearly have no idea what they are talking about when they address the school. I wasn’t the one who recommended or even brought up the school. I only chimed in AFTER it was incorrectly ‘attacked.’ </p>
<p>For the record, Tulane isn’t ranked in Businessweek because they didn’t respond to survey, not because they were somehow a worse school for business than 100 other schools. Did you really think it had a worse business school than LSU who placed at 88?</p>
<p>From BusinessWeek:
“How is the response rate calculated for schools that choose the “opt-in” method? BusinessWeek divides the number of responses by the number of students who received the “opt-in” e-mail. If 1,000 students receive the message and 500 opt in, 250 survey responses would give that school a response rate of 25%, not 50%. Schools with response rates that fall below the minimum will not be ranked.”</p>