<p>A few top undergrad business schools would be notre dame, cornell, university of virginia, university of texas austin, university of pennsylvania - wharton and so many. Unfortunately, I don’t know if any of them would have good scholarships for internationals.</p>
<p>Indiana doesn’t have financial aid for internationals.
Very few public universities do.
Some have merit aid, such as U Alabama, especially for students who plan on doing engineering (you’d have to have completed precalculus and have top stats though; engineering is always a popular major to have for people who want to get an MBA.)</p>
<p>Penn and Northwestern are very difficult to get into, they’re totally unpredictable even for students who are the best in their country.
You need to look at reasonable schools in addition to “dream” schools, especially if you need financial aid.
if your family’s low-income, you can apply to Berea. It’s very hard to get into but all students are guaranteed a full tuition scholarship and a job to help pay for room and board.</p>
<p>thanks moneyp but I’m hoping for something little lower than Wharton/Cornell
I’ll check Notre Dame but it is also quite a tough school to get into </p>
<p>Indiana does provide scholarship for internationals </p>
<p>can anyone suggest any other university? deadline is close and i’m really worried</p>
<p>Sorry, you’re right. Indiana has one scholarship for a Chinese student, one scholarship for a student from Hong Kong or China who majors in East Asian studies, and one scholarship for Korean students. In addition, it has merit aid $2,000-$11,000. But they also increased their COA to $49,000 which is about $10,000 more than it used to. :s</p>
<p>Look for AACSB business schools. However, these schools rarely offer international financial aid. Many of the best schools for financial aid are also the most stringent academically and they tend not to offer business degrees, but rather “academic” majors, from which students may go on to get an MBA after a few years of work.</p>
<p>You could go to each AACSB undergraduate school’s website and see which ones offer scholarships.</p>
<p>What are your scores: SATs, GPA, Class Rank (if available)? Merit aid is tight for internationals, and even tighter for students without excellent scores. </p>
<p>What country are you from? It might be more practical and a lot less expensive to aim for the U.S. for Grad School, if you can get into a reasonable school at home for undergrad.</p>
<p>MikeyX, how good are your SATs and your ECs? You may try looking at Colgate. They have a top Econ program and Mathematical Economics program. They give good financial aid to those admitted and they are free to apply to for internationals.</p>
<p>SATs i scored a 1900, will be resitting in December along with 2 subject tests (Math 1,2)
ECs honestly are quite weak, the only thing I’m proud of and passionate about is a charitable tourney i started </p>
<p>my grades are fine so far, did my IGs with 5A<em>s and then AS Level 4As, hopefully finish A2 with 4A</em></p>
<p>MikeyX, go for resitting the SATs.
Your original plan of looking at lower tier schools may help. Indiana is good (you originally listed it). Maybe UAlabama. Maybe UIUC.</p>
<p>Oh, just in case: are you planning to resit the SAT (in American English: retake) in November? because you can’t take the SAT and SAT Subjects on the same date as far as I know.</p>
<p>I also wanted to major in business, but I ended enrolling in a school that does not offer business but offers many other great options, specially the prospects of going to a top MBA. If you had higher stats, say 2100 SAT and top 5% of class, i would say that you apply to the 6 need blind schools for internationals, which consists of acceptance rates of less than 7% each in the international pool. However, you should look at St Marys in Texas which gives merit scholarships to students of your caliber and has a business school.</p>