<p>i am talking about undergraduate</p>
<li>Berkeley (Haas)</li>
<li>USC (Marshall)</li>
<li>NYU (Stern)</li>
<li>University of Michigan (Ross i think)</li>
<li>UCLA (Anderson)</li>
</ol>
<p>i dont know which one is better than the other.</p>
<p>i know berkeley haas is ranked the highest above. usc has crazy good networking. stern is basically in NYC so good for internship i think. i know that stern is ranked at 5 and ross at 4. i dont know crap about ucla.</p>
<ol>
<li>Ross/Haas/Stern</li>
<li>USC/UCLA</li>
</ol>
<p>Even though Haas is ranked above Stern and alongside Ross, in terms of Wall Street placement, Ross and Stern do better. Between NYU/Mich, Michigan is a better school overall. Thus, my ranking would be - </p>
<ol>
<li>UMich - Ross</li>
<li>NYU - Stern</li>
<li>UCB - Haas</li>
<li>USC - Marshall</li>
<li>UCLA - Anderson</li>
</ol>
<p>Any of those would be great...</p>
<p>UCLA doesn't have an undergraduate business program -- Anderson is its MBA school.</p>
<p>Ross, Stern and Haas are excellent. Any sort of ranking would be debatable.
I would think UCLA comes next and then USC, but even those are very close.</p>
<p>You'd be more than fine at any of those.</p>
<p>USC, Cal, Michigan, and NYU are all great schools for business, and they are all top-10 undergrad business schools. With all due respect, those who are ranking UCLA as one of the best schools for undergrad business really need to research before they post. I'm not putting down UCLA, but they do not have an undergraduate business program. </p>
<p>Keep in mind that each of the schools has unique strengths. For example, USC Marshall has joint-degree programs in Business and Cinematic Arts or East Asian Languages and Cultures if those topics interest you.</p>
<p>Haas only accepts students at the junior level. Students are required to take a very specific program of prerequsites and apply to Haas during sophomore year. Admission is very competitive.</p>
<p>If you're applying to Berkeley as a freshman with the intention of majoring in business at Haas, you have to apply as "Undeclared - Pre-Business".</p>
<p>Undergraduate</a> Program - Admissions - Haas School of Business</p>
<p>UCLA does not have an undergraduate business program, but they are very well recruited for investment banking and management consulting. I would go far enough to say that they place better than USC.</p>