Question about transfer advice recieved...

<p>Hey all, I recently made a post exploring transfer options based on my current standing academically. I mentioned that I was a business major, and as a result wanted to imply that I wanted to transfer into the business school of the schools I was interested in, but noticed that I may have been unclear which leads me to my question.. based on my statistics Sophomore, 3.84 GPA, good activites & a job (initial post can be found here for more detail .. <a href="http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=280382)%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/showthread.php?t=280382)&lt;/a>, would they give me any chance at tranferring into the business school of the respective schools I was looking at... the schools, if you didn't look at the inital thread listed were USC, Texas, UNC, Cornell, Georgetown, and NYU (Michigan was also listed but someone pointed out that you have to be in their business school for 3 years). I am sorry if people who had posted initially replied with this intent, but I am largely unfamiliar with all of this...thank you for the advice initially and any further guidance one could give me...</p>

<p>Sounds like good stats. Apply anywhere you want to go. What's 60 bucks for a shot at the next two years of your life. </p>

<p>Seriously.. sounds like good stats. 3.84, good activities, and a job. A good gpa and a good job tell a lot about a person. Add ecs to that and a stellar essay and i'd say you're a top candidate almost anywhere provided the courses you have completed transfer over to the school. The smithbarney internship is something to seriously mention in your essay. finance internships are fought over and to land something like that is a great accomplishment.</p>

<p>high school stats are a little shakey for top flight schools but you're a sophmore so it probably won't matter. give it shot and just wait it out.</p>

<p>USC looks like a lock, and so does NYU. Georgetown has had good transfer rates for McDough at roughly about 30% for each of the past couple of years, and with those stats, you're in pretty good shape. Don't know too much about Cornell nor the state schools you mention, but since the first is an Ivy and for the latter you would be considered out of state, they will both be difficult.</p>