Poly Sci / English / Business Considerations?

<p>Hi,</p>

<p>Currently considering mid to upper tier schools for law, english, or business studies - most likely Business Law with a Poly Sci / English double major.</p>

<p>Anyone here a intended student of law or business and have preference? I was considering the following schools</p>

<p>ACT: 31 - taking in Fall hoping to get a 34 at least, but nothing guaranteed
SAT IIs - 760 US, 700 Lit
State V.P. of DECA (business club like FBLA)
AP Scholar with Distrinction (5 US, 5 Lit, 4 US Gov, 3 Comparative Gov)
Countless awards, leadership recognitions</p>

<p>White, Grandmother immigrated from France (I expect nothing from that) and Jewish</p>

<p>George Washington U
University of Chicago
NYU
Wash U at St. Louis
Columbia
Yale (Reach)
Dartmouth (Reach)
SUNY (Safety)
Macaulay (Safety)</p>

<p>Should I remove or add any certain schools? All seem in grasp to some extent, beyond financial concerns i could honestly consider any one of them.</p>

<p>I’d like to give some helpful words but your whole post - the possible majors, schools, are all over the map. There really is no “pre-Law” in undergrad; are you most interested in Law school? If so, (don’t laugh) Philosophy is a great major that Law schools love, and LACs are great places to study philosophy. “Business” is such a dreary word - why not use college to explore and clarify your interests rather than punch your card. One of my friends wanted a future in business but the econ classes interested him so much that he ended up being a professor of business. Your potential interests and careers are so varied that you might want to find the kind of place that will encourage (or tolerate) your being “undeclared” for a while until you find out what college subjects truly interest you. Best wishes.</p>

<p>Thanks! Didn’t think about it like that, to be honest though that’s why i’m not concerned major-wise, because they all can lead to law school. </p>

<p>A friend of mine was a double major in poly sci and history, and he went to med school - it honestly doesn’t matter.</p>

<p>But the school does - so I guess my best argument here is “go to the best school you can afford”</p>