Picked Georgetown over UMich Ross and NYU Stern

<p>I’ll be pursuing a law degree. In that context does it matter as much?</p>

<p>But people with sophistication know there is more to life than Wall St. High school seniors don’t know any better.</p>

<p>juillet,</p>

<p>I am with you. My point is to tell people don’t make it a bigger deal than what it really is.</p>

<p>In the context of going to law school, gerogetown’s liberal arts core will help to prepare you. Of the three you will get the best overall education at Georgetown Msb, because you have to take a lot of non-business courses. It is also more undergraduate focused than both nyu and Michigan. There is an emphasis on teaching.</p>

<p>Definitely look at nyu and Michigan for law school.</p>

<p>1789, I am not sure how Georgetown can be described as “tight knit”. A school with over 7,000 undergrads and over 15,000 students overall will not be that tight knight.</p>

<p>That being said, the OP could not go wrong with his three options. Georgetown is awesome and students their have excellent professional placement opportunities. The Georgetown area is also excelent and fun.</p>

<p>

Yeah right, the lies that people spread on this website border are over the top. Why is Georgetown so much better represented at Harvard and Wharton MBA?</p>

<p>Harvard Business School
[Top</a> Feeder Colleges to Harvard B-School | Poets and Quants](<a href=“http://poetsandquants.com/2011/08/15/top-feeder-colleges-to-harvard-business-school/2/]Top”>http://poetsandquants.com/2011/08/15/top-feeder-colleges-to-harvard-business-school/2/)
Georgetown: 16
NYU: 13
Michigan: 9</p>

<p>Wharton Business School
[Top</a> Feeder Schools To Wharton’s MBA Program | Poets and Quants](<a href=“http://poetsandquants.com/2011/08/07/top-feeder-schools-to-whartons-mba-program/]Top”>http://poetsandquants.com/2011/08/07/top-feeder-schools-to-whartons-mba-program/)
Georgetown: 28
Michigan: 14
NYU: 11</p>

<p>Georgetown is right there in the mix with the Ivies, Stanford, MIT, Duke, Northwestern, etc. while the other two schools are not.</p>

<p>Alexandre, I get your point because indeed it seems unlikely, But given that most undergraduate students live on a relatively small self contained campus with one dining hall, and without exclusive fraternities and sororities it lends itself to a more tight knit community than either nyu (no campus) or Michigan (big state school) Most hoyas, at the very least, tend to recognize each other. Couple that with the school Spirit that comes with a half way decent hoops team and common core academic requirements, and there is a recipe for a somewhat tight knit community on the hilltop.</p>

<p>“Yeah right, the lies that people spread on this website border are over the top.”</p>

<p>Not to mention the distortions.</p>

<p>I also got accepted into NYU Stern and Georgetown’s MSB. If you look at the senior survey of MSB you can see a decent placement at Wall Street. I think I will attend Georgetown and I am visiting campus tomorrow to make my final decision. NYU Stern is a good school but you are also competing with 600 other Sternies who are dead set for front office positions. What I have learnt by researching since last one week is that Georgetown is a cool place with cool people and offers same opportunities. Good Luck! See you at Georgetown this fall. </p>

<p><a href=“Cawley Career Education Center | Georgetown University”>Cawley Career Education Center | Georgetown University;

<p>How did this thread get 1300+ views?</p>

<p>Stern, Ross, and McDonough are peers, since it’s Wharton first, then everyone else.</p>

<p>“Stern, Ross, and McDonough are peers, since it’s Wharton first, then everyone else.”</p>

<p>A bit of a simplistic and inaccurate statement don’t you think kwu?</p>