<p>Hey I was wondering what everyone's opinion is about Five year MBA/BS Programs. Just for basic knowledge, I would like to know these things:</p>
<p>1) Would you rather go to Stern or a five year MBA/BS Program at a college.
2) What are the pros and cons of each
3) Out of which program would you get a better internship/ job when you graduate. ( I mean "better" as in more money, or a more prestigious firm.)</p>
<p>i am curious which schools offer the 5 year program because i know all the good business schools that would be worth attending dont take kids without serious work experience. so i would rather go to stern and get a good job and then go for mba if needed, rather than go to a 5 year mba/bs program at some no name school.</p>
<p>well, I know claremont has a partnership with a university in its consortium that had 5-year BS/MBA programs. But in this case, the university sucks</p>
<p>Well, I know both St. Rose College and Union College have 5 year and 7 year MBA/BS Programs respectively. I mean, they are both pretty good colleges, they aren't too bad when i visited and applied. I just want to know what everyone thinks. Bump.</p>
<p>In my opinion, a NYU Stern degree (and the opportunities while you're here) are much better than St Rose College or Union College (including an MBA at those schools). You may want to check businessweek undergrad rankings and other sites to see which firms recruit at which universities.</p>
<p>im thinking about applying for this program.
it would incorporate work experience thru the two summer internships the program would require you to do.
but claremont graduate univeristy isn’t ranked very high on the list of business schools.
i believe it’s ranked number 71?
that’s pretty low.
it would save time to stay in teh program but I’m not sure if it is worth it because when I graduate with the MBA, people will not respect the school and therefore not respect the degree, even if I got the degree earlier than my peers.
what does everyone else think?</p>
<p>All of the top business schools have a separate MBA programs. I would go with a bachelors from a top school over a 5 year program. Find a job then after a couple years apply to some top MBA programs. If you are working at a large company then they typically will pay for your education depending on your GPA (A 100% paid, B 70, C or lower nothing) something along those lines.</p>