<p>I'm going to be applying to Michigan after having completed two years at a CC. After a semester or full year, I'd be interested in transferring into Ross. Has anyone had any luck with this? I know Ross has some sort of 3 year BBA program, but is there also a 2 year program? I understand that I'd actually be in college for 5 years total, but that's ok since CC has been so cheap. </p>
<p>I don't think, coming from a CC, it would be wise to apply as an external OOS transfer to Ross as the odds are incredibly slim. I'm guessing this is the most pragmatic approach to being accepted into the business school.</p>
<p>ross used to be a 2 year program, but recently changed it to a 3 year program for this upcoming fall. the reason for it was to spread out the core business classes from 2 to 3 years because it was extremely rigorous. before, you would take mostly all liberal arts classes your first 2 years and all business classes your last 2 years.</p>
<p>and with all of your credits, you really wouldn't able to transfer internally to ross. just go for ross man. if i got in, i'm sure you can.</p>
<p>I did what you are talking about: transferred to UMICH LS&A last year and will be going to Ross next year. I am fortunate to be a member of the last 2-year class as this structure was condusive to my academic plan and path. Unfortunately, the program is a mandatory 3 years now, so you'd end up doing 6 years of UG. I think they would think you've got some sort of problem if you wanted to stay in UG for 6 years and that would probably factor into their decision, haha! The biggest problem for you trying to transfer directly in (and I think I've said this before) is that Ross will not accept CC credits for accounting. Can you take accounting at a local University whose credits they do accept? That would definitely add some credibility to your CC 4.0 and put you in contention for external transfer. </p>
<p>thanks for the responses...I guess even if I did get admitted externally to Ross (which is very difficult) I'd still end up being in school 5 years total. Unfortunately I'm already taking ACCT I and am almost through with it and my schedule is a little too crammed to fit in two accounting courses at a university. I guess I'll stick with Michigan Economics. They've got a strong Econ department huh?</p>