Transfer chances to Top 10 Business Schools from IU Kelley

<p>Looking to transfer to:
UVA
UMich
Northwestern
NYU
UNC
USC
Harvard</p>

<p>Stats:
3.9 GPA in my first year here at Indiana
Extremely rigorous highschool 3.1 GPA
ACT: 29
Taking all business courses.
Extra Curriculars = Charity I created (Bone Marrow Buddies), Ski & snowboard club, Kelley living learning center, Accounting Club, Stock Market Club.
Work Experience: Internship at NC Sports, Sports Agency.
Worked 2 summers in a cancer research lab at the Cleveland Clinic.</p>

<p>Whaddya think? / What colleges do you think would be my best options if not shown?</p>

<p>This for undergrad?</p>

<p>Northwestern and Harvard don’t have undergrad business degrees.</p>

<p>You could probably transfer…USC and Michigan seem most transfer friendly.<br>
However, IU Kelley is a fantastic program…do you get in-state tuition there?</p>

<p>You could also apply to Berkeley’s Haas School of Business in your sophomore year as a junior transfer. Haas is a two-year program, but very competitive for admission. Be sure you have all the prerequisites taken care of when you apply:
[Admissions</a> for Transfer Students, Undergraduate Program - Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley](<a href=“Admissions - Undergraduate Program - Berkeley Haas”>Admissions - Undergraduate Program - Berkeley Haas)</p>

<p>Michigan’s Ross School of Business is a 3-year program so be prepared to spend 3 years at Michigan.</p>

<p>Only 1% of the 2010 entering sophomore BBA class is from transfers.</p>

<p>Why are you wanting to transfer? As a freshman, you are barely touching the business curriculum anyway.</p>

<p>I dont get instate tuition and i know that im only done with a single semester of my freshman year but i just dont feel like Kelley isnt the best place for me to learn at. </p>

<p>Yes its for undergrad. </p>

<p>Michigan has really been the biggest interest for me and I saw that the transfer acceptance is pretty difficult but do you think with my information I have a chance?</p>

<p>I doubt you’d make it into any of those programs. Your HS stats are low and you only have grades for 1/2 a semester in college. Can you afford UMich at full pay?</p>

<p>Yes. Money isnt an issue and my GPA will stay the same for the next semester.</p>

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<p>Count your blessings that you are in Kelley and stay put. You aren’t going anywhere better.</p>

<p>^ have to agree unless you stay another full year and keep your gpa high. harvard wouldn’t happen even if they had an undergrad business program. business programs are usually difficult to transfer into anyway</p>

<p>If I did stay another year, where do you think would be the best upgrade possibility? Assuming i have a 3.8+ GPA cummulative</p>

<p>Michigan’s Ross School of Business does accept a few transfer students from other colleges and universities----very few,about 1% of its entering class for the 3-year program, which in a class of 400 amounts to a grand total of 4 students. A fifth of the class is Ross “preferred admits” who are basically guaranteed a place in the Business School so long as they meet specified standards in other University of Michigan schools or colleges (usually but not always Literature, Science & the Arts) as freshmen. The stats of the preferred admits are very strong: average ACT 33, middle 80% HS GPA 3.75-4.70 (on a 5-point scale). The bulk of the Ross BBA class are internal transfers from other parts of the University of Michigan; in that category, only about 40% of those who apply to Ross are admitted. For transfer applicants from other schools, the admit rate has got to be far, far lower. Bottom line, it’s very, very competitive to get in, and your chances appear slim. On the other hand your first semester college grades are very good, so I wouldn’t completely dismiss the idea. It may be worth a shot, but it’s a moonshot. I’d say you’re probably staying at Kelley. </p>

<p>Zero chance of transferring to Ross if you stay at Indiana for a second year. Best I can tell, they only accept transfers for the beginning of the 3-year BBA program, and they require everyone to be in their program for 3 years.</p>