Undergraduate Business Schools for Rising Senior

<p>Hey guys,</p>

<p>So Here's the deal: I'm extremely interested in going into the business field. However, I'm not sure which path I should take. Would it be better to go to a school like Wharton where there is a specific business major like finance and business public policy, or should I go to a school where there only is a college of liberal arts and sciences and then major in something like economics with international studies? I heard both work well, I just need more opinions. I see myself working more with numbers and money instead of theory like economics. Also I'm wondering if you guys could see if my college list matches with my stats:</p>

<p>Rank: 1/694
ACT Score: 34
Weighted GPA: 5.813/5.0
Race: Asian
AP Classes taken: Sophomore year: AP Euro Junior Year: AP Bio, AP Chem, AP USH, AP English Language Senior Year: AP English Lit, AP Spanish Lang, AP Psych, AP Macro/Micro Econ, AP Govt, AP Calc BC
State: IL
Large Public High School</p>

<p>Extra Curricular list:
President of Indian Student Association
Captain of Scholastic Bowl
President of Spanish Honor Society
Captain of JV Tennis (sophomore year)
Treasurer of Model UN Team
Member of for 3 years, Yearbook, Math Team, and Student Council
Volunteer Hours: 300 at two different locations</p>

<p>I'm also a Summer Research Intern with the American Cancer Society. I know I'm looking into business but this is a pretty selective program, so I'm sending in my research regardless just because it's pretty prestigious in my opinion. </p>

<p>Here are the colleges I'm looking into:
Business (Finance +Business Public Policy):
UPenn (Wharton) Georgetown (McDonough) NYU (Stern) WashU (Olin) U-Mich (Ross)
Notre Dame
Econ/International Studies:
Northwestern, Duke, Stanford, USC, Harvard, Yale</p>

<p>Thanks once again!</p>

<p>bumpp</p>

<p>10char</p>

<p>If you are interested in quantitative finance, you may want to consider adding additional math and statistics courses to a business or economics major.</p>