undergraduate business schools -- management

<p>My niece is applying to undergraduate business schools. She would like to major in management. Her SAT scores are:
Critical Reading: 660
Math: 620
Writing: 630
What are some good options?</p>

<p>Thanks!</p>

<p>indiana has a good business undergrad, but i wouldn't really recommend going there, unless you like huge schools, big, ugly campuses, and indianians. And i even question the quality of their business school, the average SAT score there is like 200-300 points lower than every single one of its peers in the rankings</p>

<p>EDIT: so i guess this is more of an un-recommendation, haha</p>

<p>Indiana's campus is one of the most beautiful in the country. Lots of trees, wonderful limestone buildings, and a creek running through campus. It's very clean, well-run, and friendly. The town of Bloomington is a classic college town with lots of interesting bars and restaurants.</p>

<p>i went there last year, i disagree wholeheartedly</p>

<p>the campus has its nice-ish parts, but it's nowhere you will ever really go, the places you walk through on the way to class are full of ugly, grey, monotonous buildings.</p>

<p>The entire campus is laid out poorly, with every building you never need to go to in-between your dorm and class, no matter where you live. It is also di-sected by roads and there is concrete everywhere. There is no quad, it is a rectangle of woods that is both inconvenient and, in my opinion, unsightly.</p>

<p>Town is decent but it's very far, relatively, from the dorms and I went maybe five times the entire year i spent there.</p>

<p>I was in the minority however as alot of people do go to the bars, which are nice if you prefer the company of drunk, might-as-well-be-southern pseudo-idiots, who are actually in fact welcome company in comparison to the crowds at most of the frat parties.</p>

<p>but if you want to be referred to as "bro," or, in your niece's case, "*****" for four years while enjoying the environment of a city located 7 miles from the KKK's origin, while getting a strangely and ironically reputable degree in business, indiana is a good place to look into.</p>

<p>Dude, Indiana has a gorgeous campus and Bloomington is a great little college town. Yes, in a campus of 1,000+acres, you are bound to have some ugly spots, but most of the Indiana campus is gorgeous. And I found IU students to be very down to earth and friendly. </p>

<p>Yes, it is huge and the average student is not as gifted as the average student at say Wharton or Sloan, but can the OP's niece get into those schools?</p>

<p>East Coast school suggestions to investigate: Larger schools: UConn, Clemson, James Madison, UMD-College Park, Towson, Northeastern, Boston U, Fordham, U Pitt, Penn State, UVM, Syracuse, Sunys-Bing, Buffalo, Albany, Hofstra
Smaller schools:Bentley, Babson, Bryant, Quinnipiac, Ithaca, Susquehanna, Marist, Scranton, Siena, Hartwick, Elon, Manhattan College</p>

<p>Diversity is an important issue.</p>

<p>I think that a fair number of schools that I listed are diverse, and some are not diverse, so I guess you would need to go through the list.</p>

<p>IU's campus is supposed to be beautiful, but i never found it that way, and most, if not all, of the people who came to visit me agreed.</p>

<p>NYU might be an option, depending on her GPA, etc. Babson also, like the guy above me said, or DePaul.</p>