<p>Hey guys,</p>
<p>I attended a reputable CC in California last year for fun and never thought about coming back to do my whole bachelor in the us. However, options changed.</p>
<p>So can you tell me what my chances are to be admitted to out of state unis for business undergraduate? With rigor courseload, good but probably not extremely distinctive ECs and 1-2 internships and 3.7-4.0GPA? This is what I would plan and surely accomplish, knowing how easy it was for me in CC from my previous experience.</p>
<p>I would transfer after 2 years to meet all the prereqs and breadth requirements of different schools. do they overlap a lot so that it is possible to meet all the reqs for most schools in 2 years? Berkeley is quite a lot but if it overlaps with other schools I guess its fine?</p>
<p>The only good bschool in Cali is Berkeley Haas, but it is so hard to get in that I wonder if there are other maybe not as superb as Cal but still good OOS schools with a good name that I could get in? </p>
<p>And is it only tough to get into public outofstate unis and privates dont care or is there no difference?</p>
<p>USC does not really interest me, I don't think I like living in a really unsafe ghetto and the student body seems to be not so cool. UCR is obviously a horrible location to and the program has no good reputation. UCLA is BizEcon and not Business. </p>
<p>Indiana Kelley has a really good reputation and seems to be really easy to get in, but you have to complete one semester at IU before getting accepted to the bschool, which means I have to stay there (and pay!) for 3 years, which makes it really expensive. Plus its in a small, small town. </p>
<p>But how about other well ranked schools like Northeastern, Boston College , Carnegie Mellon, Georgetown etc? Really where do I stand a good chance as oos transfer with a good academic record, not harvard material though.</p>
<p>Undergrad</a> - BSchools</p>
<p>Thank you so much! Please, Im happy for every reply.
Oh and hello btw, I am a long ghost reader of this forum :)</p>