<p>PLease suggest some international safeties for me.</p>
<p>I do not have a very good GPA and have not taken GRE, GMAT.
But I still want to do my master's probably in Engineering or Business Administration.</p>
<p>I have completed my BE from India.</p>
<p>You could also PM me.</p>
<p>Thank You</p>
<p>How can people answer the question when you provide so little information? You would be better served by looking at a list of every university in the world, closing your eyes, and placing your finger on the list...wherever you land is where you should go.</p>
<p>hello CWalker,</p>
<p>please suggest some colleges/universities with high acceptance rates.</p>
<p>Give me something to work with...how bad is your bad GPA? Do you want to study in the US or somewhere else? If the US then what region do you prefer? And is it going to be engineering or business? Grad school isn't something you should do just to do...and if your stats are so poor that you have to go to a really poor university then it may not be worth it at all.</p>
<p>I'm not overly familiar with business schools, but I grew up in Midland Michigan, home to a school called Northwood University. I may be mistaken, but I think GMAT is not required and I don't think it's an overly well known school, so I'd guess acceptance rates are decently high. If you're going for an MBA, check it out. Northwood</a> - DeVos Graduate School</p>
<p>high acceptance rate = less than decent grad program that most employers, especially out of the US, won't be familiar with.</p>
<p>Do you really want that? You should take your GRE/GMAT and see what you can get. Also, there was a thread here a while ago about someone also from India who regularly got 60s but is considered very high at her/his university. GPA isn't the sole factor- your letters of recommendations from your professors matter as much and they can clarify where your GPA is really coming from (were you top of the class or just average?)/</p>