<p>Note: I am not the holder of this account. I am his older brother. He has given me permission.</p>
<p>I am a senior at Harvard. I got a perfect LSAT score, have a 4.12 GPA, and am involved in many extracurricular activates. My major is History.
These are my concerns:
1) If I attend a top ten school, will the location matter? I plan to practice in Boston or NYC.
2) Which schools are better for corporate/M&A Law? I plan to work at Skadden. My dad is a partner there, and he said he can get me an internship. My dad went to Harvard, but I don't want to go to HBS. "If you're looking for someone with textbook answers, a broad network, and willful obedience, hire a HBS grad. If you're looking for someone with vision, an innovative drive, and exceptional interpersonal skills, hire a Stanford GSB grad."
Read more: The</a> World's Best Business Schools - Business Insider
I don't want to go to SBS as that is in California, and I do not want to go to school there.
I am mainly choosing between Columbia and UPenn, but I am open to other options.</p>
<p>I am curious, where is this unattributed quote from, exactly? I skimmed the article you provided but could not find the quote. If your father is a partner at Skadden, and this is where you want to work, why not just ask him where most of Skadden’s new hires went to school?</p>
<p>An internship is not a job and it is very rare for a partner in a major firm to bring in his or her kids. It generally does not sit well with other partners in the firm. However, such partners often help their kids get excellent jobs in other top firms. Columbia and UPenn are both top recruiting locations for almost every firm in the country. You couldn’t do better than either of those choices.</p>
<p>If you’re going to make up stories, do some research. There are factual errors in your post. (Hint: it is impossible to have a 4.12 gpa at Harvard.)</p>
<p>the easy and obvious answer is Harvard. HBS is world renown. Second choice would be Stanford, and Wharton-Penn a close third. Columbia would only be a consideration for a full ride, IMO.</p>
<p>Better yet, take that “4.12” to Yale LS and then apply to HBS. Win-win.</p>
<p>"the easy and obvious answer is Harvard. HBS is world renown. Second choice would be Stanford, and Wharton-Penn a close third. Columbia would only be a consideration for a full ride, IMO.</p>
<p>Better yet, take that “4.12” to Yale LS and then apply to HBS. Win-win."</p>
<p>Considering all aspects of the program, Stanford’s JD/MBA program is probably the best JD/MBA program available. However, Harvard has a stronger alumni network; the strength of Harvard Law’s alumni network in law, government, and business is unmatched by any other law school, and HBS also has an arguably unmatched alumni network in business.</p>
<p>You were rejected from HBS+HLS, and GSB+SLS? Ouch.</p>
<p>At the very least, do your MBA at Wharton and your JD at HLS (you must have gotten in, given your LSAT+GPA)–or drop the useless JD and just do Wharton.</p>
<p>I never said I was rejected. I have not apply to any school, and I clearly said I do not want to apply to HBS or Stanford.
I also said I want to be a lawyer so a JD is-what’s the word I’m looking for? Oh yeah: essential.
Read the post next time before replying.</p>