LAC vs Undergrad Business School

Hi,
I am a high school student in the college admissions process, and I'm considering a variety of schools. I'm quite interested in attending a liberal arts college(think Williams, Middlebury, Amherst, etc.) and pursuing IB/MBB-->MBA-->MF PE/HF after graduation, but I am worried that some of these schools(particularly non W/A schools) will limit me. How much stronger are recruiting sessions/employment opportunities at an undergraduate business school(UVA McIntire, Ross, Stern, Emory, etc.) than a highly ranked LAC? I would appreciate insight from graduates of either type of school.

Thanks

 

Love the long term view that you have taken for planning your career path, but I'd encourage you to simultaneously (and primarily) focus on the immediate future... Right now you should focus on getting into and enrolling in the best school (in terms of employment placement) that you possible can

Now, my two cents: I went to McIntire and can say that all of MBB and all of BB IB actively recruit on grounds... That said, two of my family members went to small liberal arts, one to Bowdoin and one to Amherst, and both were presented with more opportunities than they could have ever asked for...

I would stay away from Emory if you can get into one of the above

 

What makes Emory such of a turn-off here? McIntire/Ross etc are definitely a tear above, but I'm curious as to why Emory doesn't have the IB prestige to match a reasonably strong reputation.

 
SwerveBack:
is Stern better than Georgetown? I was under the impression of the opposite.

There's absolutely zero chance I'd ever attend Stern undergrad over Georgetown. The rest of NYU undergrad really brings it down a notch presteeeej-wise.

 

In terms of finance, Stern is better than Georgetown but not by alot. Kid from Georgetown will be just as competitive and it will come down to other qualities in the resume. Stern, I think jst has better access to the Street but I could be wrong.

 

Career placement shouldn't be the only criteria you look at when you go to a school. As more likely then not you will change your major and you may discover that you don't want to do finance (I know very hard to comprehend to a high school student). Things like your intended major, campus location, quality of faculty, student body and M/F ratio are all very important criteria also. If you have to ask then Georgetown and NYU are your best bets. Not just for investment banking but also because they have exceptional reputations in other fields of study.

 

If you're certain you want to try banking, the b-school school route will probably get you there easier--even if not a top one. After Williams and Amherst, there is virtually no OCR at LACs.

And when someone is looking at your resume in a few years for a banking job, your story will probably make a lot more sense if you're coming from a b-school than an LAC. I had to put a lot of effort into justifying (during interviews) why I wanted to do banking coming out of an LAC.

That said, there are plenty of people from LACs in banking, and I have never once regretted going the liberal arts route.

 

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