<p>So my daughter is on exchange in Spain and asked me if any of the schools she was applying to had good International Business programs because she's thinking of that instead of math....what schools are good for International Business that wouldn't be much of a reach for her with a 3.96 UW GPA, 30 ACT, 17/348 class rank and biggest hook is that she is spending her senior year as an exchange student and should come home trilingual?</p>
<p>She's already accepted to Iowa State which I know has a decent business college, but unsure about international business, and she's also applied to Auburn and then GA Tech (which doesn't have it). Any thoughts on ISU or Auburn? Any other suggestions where she should apply. FA is definitely a consideration.</p>
<p>Apparently GA Tech does have an “international plan” that can be applied to the BBA so I guess it’s still a possibility too if anybody knows anything about it…</p>
<p>Wow, I never would have guessed that! Thanks for the info. I had her look into it and she’s going to apply there - fortunately if your scores are high enough that you might get into the honors college, you have until Nov 15 instead of Oct 15 for early action.</p>
<p>She won’t be disappointed if she goes there, it’s currently where I attend. It also has the #1 honors college in the United States so there’s another plus</p>
<p>Echo that USC (South Carolina) has an excellent International Business program. However, you are not automatically admitted into the program unless you are in the Honors Program and/or Capstone. In 2011, DS was not admitted into the Honors program despite a 32 ACT and a 3.97 GPA ; 8 APs with 4/5s, student athlete, volunteer…etc. He was admitted in the Capstone which was an auto-admit to International Business.
He chose to attend UA on a Presidential Scholarship, Honors College, International Honors College, started freshman year with sophmore status because of generous AP credit, double majoring in accounting and german. He may be considering USC for his MBA because of the international program. USC International (MBA only) is also part of the Academic Common Market allowing instate tuition.
As you mentioned Auburn, I happened to have graduated from Auburn with an International Business degree/French.</p>
<p>actc - Thanks for the Richmond suggestion. She looked at it and decided it was too small of a college for her.</p>
<p>kmw - I didn’t know that about not being automatically in the program if you aren’t honors or capstone at SC. Do you have any idea how hard it is to get into it otherwise? And since you know all about Auburn, how is their international bus program? Would you recommend it?</p>