<p>Does anyone know where i can get the rankings for USC's Marshall and Viterbi?</p>
<p>the US National report never lists anything past 5 and of course USC isn't in the top five for either of the two so is there anywhere i can get rankings for them?</p>
<p>I've been looking at their website and they just say pretty much " consistently rank as one of the top blah blah"..</p>
<p>I found this on wikipedia for Marshall. Not THE most reliable source, but whatever.</p>
<p>"The school is considered a top 25 business school by both U.S. News & World Report and BusinessWeek (at times it has been a top 20 in both publications).
The degrees offered are multiple. In addition to the undergraduate (ranked 9th by U.S. News & World Report, 2006) and Ph. D. programs, there are:
Marshall MBA (full-time) - ranked 21st by BusinessWeek, 21st by U.S. News & World Report, 2007
Marshall MBA.PM (part-time) - consistently ranked in the top 10 by U.S. News & World Report
Marshall Undergraduate Program (Bachelor of Science) - ranked 9th by U.S. News & World Report, 19th by BusinessWeek, 2007
EMBA (Executive MBA) - ranked 9th by U.S. News & World Report, 2006, 6th by BusinessWeek
EMBA in Shanghai
IBEAR MBA (International) - ranked 10th by U.S. News & World Report, 2006
Master of Business Taxation - ranked 8th by U.S. News & World Report, 2006
Master of Accounting - ranked top five by Public Accounting Report
Master of Medical Management
Master of Science in Business Administration
Graduate Certificate in Technology Commercialization
Global Executive MBA Program (Shanghai)"</p>
<p>US NEWS
Best Undergraduate Business Programs</p>
<ol>
<li> University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)<br></li>
<li> Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (Sloan)</li>
<li> University of California–Berkeley (Haas)</li>
<li> University of Michigan–Ann Arbor</li>
<li> New York University (Stern)</li>
<li> U. of North Carolina–Chapel Hill (Kenan-Flagler)</li>
<li> Carnegie Mellon University (PA)</li>
<li> University of Texas–Austin (McCombs)</li>
<li> Univ. of Southern California (Marshall)</li>
<li> University of Virginia (McIntire)</li>
<li>Indiana University–Bloomington (Kelley)</li>
<li>Cornell University (NY)</li>
<li>Emory University (Goizueta) (GA)</li>
<li>Ohio State University–Columbus (Fisher)</li>
<li>U. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign </li>
<li>Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison</li>
<li>Washington University in St. Louis (Olin)</li>
<li>Pennsylvania State U.–University Park (Smeal)</li>
<li>Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities (Carlson)</li>
<li>University of Notre Dame (IN)</li>
<li>Georgetown University (McDonough) (DC)</li>
</ol>
<p>US NEWS
Best Undergraduate Engineering
1. Massachusetts Inst. of Technology
2. Stanford University (CA)<br>
2. University of California–Berkeley
4. California Institute of Technology
5. Georgia Institute of Technology
5. U. of Illinois–Urbana-Champaign
7. Cornell University (NY)
7. University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
9. Carnegie Mellon University (PA)
9. Purdue Univ.–West Lafayette (IN)
9. University of Texas–Austin
12. Princeton University (NJ)
13. Univ. of Wisconsin–Madison
14. Johns Hopkins University (MD)
14. Northwestern University (IL)
14. Virginia Tech
17. Pennsylvania State U.–University Park
17. Rice University (TX)
17. Texas A&M Univ.–College Station
20. Columbia University (NY)
20. Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst. (NY)<br>
20. Univ. of California–Los Angeles
20. Univ. of Minnesota–Twin Cities
20. University of Washington
25. Duke University (NC)
25. Ohio State University–Columbus
25. Univ. of California–San Diego
25. Univ. of Maryland–College Park
29. North Carolina State U.–Raleigh
29. University of Florida
29. University of Pennsylvania
29. Univ. of Southern California
33. Harvard University (MA)</p>
<p>Notre Dame's business isn't surprising; my friend is at ND and it's apparently the easiest school to get into. I did not know Cornell had an undergrad business program, though (I thought UPenn's Wharton was the only one among the Ivies...)</p>
<p>McCombs is actually a VERY impressive program. I almost went there and their program rivals Marshall in almost every way. Most of their connections tend to be oil-centric rather than media/entrepreneurship/real estate like USC and they alumni network overall is nowhere near as strong.</p>
<p>Unlike other schools, ND does not accept students into particular schools. A student gets accepted into ND First Year Studies program and they select which school they want to attend at the end of their freshman year. My point is that the business school may be the "easiest" ND school to get into but it is also the hardest.</p>
<p>At USC you apply to a particular school and the acceptance rates vary by school. This is similar at UPenn, Cornell and most other schools.</p>
<p>Another quick note, look within the engineering and business programs at both schools. US News ranks the departments individually along with an overall ranking.</p>