<p>Baruch does not have any dorms but thay have a company that will find you a dorm. The company has it's own dorms and it's like a real dorm. I know this because my cousin slept at one of thier dorms. She truly liked it. You will be with a bunch of college students but with a lot more independence to do whatever you want. <a href="http://www.studenthousing.org/%5B/url%5D">http://www.studenthousing.org/</a></p>
<p>So it is not mandatory to dorm in Baruch, i could stay in my own home?</p>
<p>Im guessing your instate then, so yes you can stay in your own home.</p>
<p>i live in pa, but i have an apartment in uptown. Baruch seems like an excellent school, i am going to have to visit it.</p>
<p>I thought it was hard to get into Baruch from out of state.</p>
<p>Not really just depends on your sats,btw what are they?</p>
<p>i have only taken them once and i did horribly 500CR<br>
480M 450W :( i have been studying all summer and i am taking the oct and nov sat.</p>
<p>Dennis, what range of GPA and SAT score do you think an out of state student needs to get in???</p>
<p>Call first before you retake the SAT. Baruch is really straight forward with thier admission process, so thay will tell you exactly what you need according to your GPA.</p>
<p>i am panicking, if my gpa is 3.85, have alot of ec's, have taken ap courses, top 10%, and i have improved on practice sats, do you think i still have a chance</p>
<p>You'll do just fine, you do not need all those high stats to get into Baruch. Just a B+ and up and decent SAT score. Like I said just call.</p>
<p>what is the min i need on my sat to go to stern?</p>
<p>2100+...........</p>
<p>cant you apply for a NY state residency then have your tuition lowered? that's what i've heard and am intending to do IF i get into cornell. (dear god! what agony!)</p>
<p>you can do that if you have a hone in ny but reside somewhere else?</p>
<p>Hi Cathy, </p>
<p>I'm pleased to hear you are considering attending Cornell University. Information on residency for tuition purposes at Cornell can be found at <a href="http://www.bursar.cornell.edu/NYS_Residency2.cfm?CFID=29469&CFTOKEN=40043895%5B/url%5D">http://www.bursar.cornell.edu/NYS_Residency2.cfm?CFID=29469&CFTOKEN=40043895</a>. </p>
<p>You would be able to apply for New York State residency if you have fulfilled the one year residency requirement and have a green card (permanent resident status). This does not mean your application would be automatically approved; your application and supporting documentation would be reviewed and a decision made based on the facts at that time. </p>
<p>I hope this is helpful information for you.
Sincerely,
Peter Olcott
University Bursar </p>
<p>At 02:28 PM 7/17/2006, you wrote:
Hi Mr. Olcott, please allow me to introduce myself. </p>
<p>My name is Cathy Koo, and I am a Canadian citizen prospective student of Cornell University living in Boulder, Colorado. </p>
<p>What's a Canadian doing in Colorado? Let me explain. </p>
<p>1] My family lived in Canada for the last 5 years until we moved to Colorado in November of 2005.
2] My parents own a business in Longmont, Colorado, allowing them (and myself) to live in the United States as E2 Visa Status.
3] We are in the process of applying for U.S Permanent Residency, aka Green Cards
4] We expect that we will receive our green cards by the end of my freshman year in college.
5] When I have visited Cornell University a couple of weeks ago, I was surprised to find out that the college of my choice (Ag and Life Sciences) is a contract college, which means that I can be a NY state resident and pay a surprisingly lower tuition for my education. </p>
<p>Now, here's my awfully long question.
By the end of my freshman year, I will have a] stayed in New York for a year, b] hopefully received my Green Card. Do both these conditions allow me to apply for a NY state residency as a permanent resident? Or does the one year rule start applying AFTER I become a permanent resident, i.e., will I be able to apply residency in my junior year?<< </p>
<p>sorry for the long explanation and question, but I hope you can answer my question :]
-Cathy from Colorado (and Canada. sort of.)</p>
<p>
[quote]
I don't think Columbia, SUNY Stony Brook, and Binghamton have undergrad business. ... I would go first to Cornell, which has a large discount in tuition for NYS residents,...
[/quote]
</p>
<p>1.SUNY Binghamton has a School of Management -- you can look here to see if it offers the type of program you would want. <a href="http://som.binghamton.edu/programs/undergraduate/index.htm%5B/url%5D">http://som.binghamton.edu/programs/undergraduate/index.htm</a></p>
<ol>
<li>Cornell only has lower tuition for NYS residents in some of its schools which are referred to as "New York State contract units." These are: the School of Labor and Industrial Relations, the College of Human Ecology, and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. <a href="http://www.cornell.edu/academics/colleges.cfm%5B/url%5D">http://www.cornell.edu/academics/colleges.cfm</a></li>
</ol>
<p>see also the following for the cost of each of the schools within COrnell: <a href="http://finaid.cornell.edu/Shared/Costs.htm%5B/url%5D">http://finaid.cornell.edu/Shared/Costs.htm</a></p>
<p>Evidently, SUNY Binghamton does have an undergrad program in management and in accounting.</p>
<p>Cornell's undergrad business program was ranked 12th in the country by US News. It is housed in one of the NYS contract colleges (Ag and Life Sciences) and therefore has much lower tuition than the rest of Cornell. It is a general business program, not just agribusiness. It is the best undergrad business degree for the money in NYS (for NYS residents). Here is the link:
<a href="http://business.aem.cornell.edu/%5B/url%5D">http://business.aem.cornell.edu/</a></p>