Jd/mba

<p>I am really curious about how JD/MBA programs work.</p>

<p>If someone can give me just some basic info on how hard it is to get a JD and an MBA and I have a question in regards to admission testing. </p>

<p>Since your applying to a JD/MBA program, the GMAT and LSAT would be required. I am really strong with Analytical side of things and I am really comfortable with the LSAT. I have been doing practice test and I have been consistently hitting 165 and I am just beginning my freshmen year of college. However I am not as strong in math. </p>

<p>I could obviously take math classes at my college and advance my skills but how important is math on the GMAT.</p>

<p>It is not much more difficult to get a JD/MBA than it would be to get the two degrees separately. You will have to apply to and be accepted to each program separately.</p>

<p>For information on the GMAT, see <a href="http://www.gmat.org%5B/url%5D"&gt;www.gmat.org&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p>

<p>That seems very doable for me. </p>

<p>Is there a lot of math in Business school. Since I am coming from a non-math major, I was just wondering if I would need to polish up on math before I got into business school. </p>

<p>One good thing I did learn, was that the GMAT doesn't have hardcore math, its mostly stuff from my high school algebra and geometry class. But I want to make sure about the math in business school, anybody know?</p>

<p>No, top business schools are mainly about networking. The classes are a joke in most cases.</p>

<p>Okay, I'm going to be the jerk to say this... but you are a FRESHMAN in college. If you want to get into a good MBA programme, you'll need at least three years of real work after college. So you're not even in position to think about a JD/MBA until you're 25. You're 19 - so another six years is about another 1/3 of your life. Knowledgeable people will still be there to help you out years from now, I promise. Stop taking LSATs, please.</p>

<p>uh, business classes don't have real math.</p>

<p>Finance is supposedly the toughest focus for business, but it's not real math.</p>