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Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame
MBA from top 5 business school> all
lock thread.
MBA from school below T30 = piece of paper.
For part-time rankings, use USNews. BusinessWeek's Part-time rankings are horrible. The top part-time schools also have top full-time programs. Not every school has a part-time program, so that's why certain programs(Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, MIT) are missing.Originally Posted by Antidope
Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame
MBA from top 5 business school> all
lock thread.
MBA from school below T30 = piece of paper.
Does this apply for both part and full times? Cause the rankings are different for each
Originally Posted by AZwildcats
I'm looking to supplement my B.S. in molecular biology with an M.B.A
Do you have access to the rest of the list?Originally Posted by eplaya06
For part-time rankings, use USNews. BusinessWeek's Part-time rankings are horrible. The top part-time schools also have top full-time programs. Not every school has a part-time program, so that's why certain programs(Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, MIT) are missing.Originally Posted by Antidope
Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame
MBA from top 5 business school> all
lock thread.
MBA from school below T30 = piece of paper.
Does this apply for both part and full times? Cause the rankings are different for each
http://grad-schools.usnew...hools/part-time-rankings
Not true about the JD. The top 25 law schools' graduates mostly always start off in six figures and have prime picks for judicial clerkships, which are good for loan forgiveness and equals an automatic 50 grand pay-bump when you do go into the private sector. Hell, even if you graduate from a top 75 school and do decently well in your class, not even top, you can make 80 grand out of school if you're located in a city. The pay-off is there, you just have to do well in school and at least go to a top 75 school.Originally Posted by impalaballa187
Entirely depends on your field. "Best Master's" is about as ambiguous as asking what the "Best Career" is. What works for you may not work for someone else.
MBA's:
If it's not from an M7 school, your post-grad prospects aren't all that bright. If you go to below 10, you're really making it hard for yourself to break into a top "White Shoe" firm. That's where the absurd bonuses and great salaries (along with pretty terrible hours) are.
JD's:
Wayyyyyyyyy to many of them on the market. If it's a top-5 school then great, but below that it's increasingly turning into a very expensive sheet of paper. The payoff compared to other industries isn't that great either.
MD's
Always in demand because of the limited supply. You'll get stable well-paying work REGARDLESS of the tier of school you end up in. It's wayyyy too much school for me though. By the time you're bringing in over $100K, you're like 27... Analysts on Wall-Street and Consultants are making that at 21... although they have less job security.
General Master's Programs:
Ehhh... pretty useless IMO
Master's in Engineering/CS
Can definitely open doors. Engineers and CS folks are always in demand, and have a much easier time landing gigs than general liberal arts people. Entirely depends though. They pay will be decent, but for the difficulty that the programs require... I personally would venture elsewhere.
Specialized Master's (Architecture, Hospitality, Etc.)
- Not really in a place to comment as I haven't really researched the fields, but I believe you had to have done undergrad in the area in order to master in it.
I'll be heading to a MBA program in 2015. It's M7 or bust, to be honest... Strengthening the resume now and getting work experience that would make me an attractive candidate. You really have to be strategic with it.
Originally Posted by cristobal
Not true about the JD. The top 25 law schools' graduates mostly always start off in six figures and have prime picks for judicial clerkships, which are good for loan forgiveness and equals an automatic 50 grand pay-bump when you do go into the private sector. Hell, even if you graduate from a top 75 school and do decently well in your class, not even top, you can make 80 grand out of school if you're located in a city. The pay-off is there, you just have to do well in school and at least go to a top 75 school.Originally Posted by impalaballa187
Entirely depends on your field. "Best Master's" is about as ambiguous as asking what the "Best Career" is. What works for you may not work for someone else.
MBA's:
If it's not from an M7 school, your post-grad prospects aren't all that bright. If you go to below 10, you're really making it hard for yourself to break into a top "White Shoe" firm. That's where the absurd bonuses and great salaries (along with pretty terrible hours) are.
JD's:
Wayyyyyyyyy to many of them on the market. If it's a top-5 school then great, but below that it's increasingly turning into a very expensive sheet of paper. The payoff compared to other industries isn't that great either.
MD's
Always in demand because of the limited supply. You'll get stable well-paying work REGARDLESS of the tier of school you end up in. It's wayyyy too much school for me though. By the time you're bringing in over $100K, you're like 27... Analysts on Wall-Street and Consultants are making that at 21... although they have less job security.
General Master's Programs:
Ehhh... pretty useless IMO
Master's in Engineering/CS
Can definitely open doors. Engineers and CS folks are always in demand, and have a much easier time landing gigs than general liberal arts people. Entirely depends though. They pay will be decent, but for the difficulty that the programs require... I personally would venture elsewhere.
Specialized Master's (Architecture, Hospitality, Etc.)
- Not really in a place to comment as I haven't really researched the fields, but I believe you had to have done undergrad in the area in order to master in it.
I'll be heading to a MBA program in 2015. It's M7 or bust, to be honest... Strengthening the resume now and getting work experience that would make me an attractive candidate. You really have to be strategic with it.
I just finished my first semester as a 1L at iupui (top 75 school), and tbh, there are so many networking opportunities and internships open to JD students if you just do decently well. This summer I'm going on a study abroad internship to China to intern at a Chinese law firm, receive school credit, and beef up my resume. I'll also have an internship at the Indiana state house when I get back from that. Also joining clubs and groups, such as the bar association for your particular state, if you're ethnically diverse, joining clubs that cater to you . . . you'd be amazed at how much that can help out. JD's really are worth it if you go to the right school, do decently well, and participate and utilize everything your school has to offer!Originally Posted by bruce negro
Originally Posted by cristobal
Not true about the JD. The top 25 law schools' graduates mostly always start off in six figures and have prime picks for judicial clerkships, which are good for loan forgiveness and equals an automatic 50 grand pay-bump when you do go into the private sector. Hell, even if you graduate from a top 75 school and do decently well in your class, not even top, you can make 80 grand out of school if you're located in a city. The pay-off is there, you just have to do well in school and at least go to a top 75 school.Originally Posted by impalaballa187
Entirely depends on your field. "Best Master's" is about as ambiguous as asking what the "Best Career" is. What works for you may not work for someone else.
MBA's:
If it's not from an M7 school, your post-grad prospects aren't all that bright. If you go to below 10, you're really making it hard for yourself to break into a top "White Shoe" firm. That's where the absurd bonuses and great salaries (along with pretty terrible hours) are.
JD's:
Wayyyyyyyyy to many of them on the market. If it's a top-5 school then great, but below that it's increasingly turning into a very expensive sheet of paper. The payoff compared to other industries isn't that great either.
MD's
Always in demand because of the limited supply. You'll get stable well-paying work REGARDLESS of the tier of school you end up in. It's wayyyy too much school for me though. By the time you're bringing in over $100K, you're like 27... Analysts on Wall-Street and Consultants are making that at 21... although they have less job security.
General Master's Programs:
Ehhh... pretty useless IMO
Master's in Engineering/CS
Can definitely open doors. Engineers and CS folks are always in demand, and have a much easier time landing gigs than general liberal arts people. Entirely depends though. They pay will be decent, but for the difficulty that the programs require... I personally would venture elsewhere.
Specialized Master's (Architecture, Hospitality, Etc.)
- Not really in a place to comment as I haven't really researched the fields, but I believe you had to have done undergrad in the area in order to master in it.
I'll be heading to a MBA program in 2015. It's M7 or bust, to be honest... Strengthening the resume now and getting work experience that would make me an attractive candidate. You really have to be strategic with it.
Agree. Top-5 is being much too conservative, any law school in the top-15 will make you great money. The University of Michigan's 2010 law graduates had a post-graduation employment rate of 98.6 percent
Also, what are you doing to beef up your resume? What are your career aspirations? I'm just curious, I'm thinking of going either the MBA or JD route.
I'm working with a non-profit now, and I've done 2 "pre-mba" type programs at top10 schools. Also in the process of interviewing for internships with MBB. Figure if I do 2 years with the non-profit, and 2 years with a management consulting firm I should be good for M7. MBB has nearly 100% placement into those schools. Just gotta spin your story and figure out what angle you want to attack.Originally Posted by bruce negro
Originally Posted by cristobal
Not true about the JD. The top 25 law schools' graduates mostly always start off in six figures and have prime picks for judicial clerkships, which are good for loan forgiveness and equals an automatic 50 grand pay-bump when you do go into the private sector. Hell, even if you graduate from a top 75 school and do decently well in your class, not even top, you can make 80 grand out of school if you're located in a city. The pay-off is there, you just have to do well in school and at least go to a top 75 school.Originally Posted by impalaballa187
Entirely depends on your field. "Best Master's" is about as ambiguous as asking what the "Best Career" is. What works for you may not work for someone else.
MBA's:
If it's not from an M7 school, your post-grad prospects aren't all that bright. If you go to below 10, you're really making it hard for yourself to break into a top "White Shoe" firm. That's where the absurd bonuses and great salaries (along with pretty terrible hours) are.
JD's:
Wayyyyyyyyy to many of them on the market. If it's a top-5 school then great, but below that it's increasingly turning into a very expensive sheet of paper. The payoff compared to other industries isn't that great either.
MD's
Always in demand because of the limited supply. You'll get stable well-paying work REGARDLESS of the tier of school you end up in. It's wayyyy too much school for me though. By the time you're bringing in over $100K, you're like 27... Analysts on Wall-Street and Consultants are making that at 21... although they have less job security.
General Master's Programs:
Ehhh... pretty useless IMO
Master's in Engineering/CS
Can definitely open doors. Engineers and CS folks are always in demand, and have a much easier time landing gigs than general liberal arts people. Entirely depends though. They pay will be decent, but for the difficulty that the programs require... I personally would venture elsewhere.
Specialized Master's (Architecture, Hospitality, Etc.)
- Not really in a place to comment as I haven't really researched the fields, but I believe you had to have done undergrad in the area in order to master in it.
I'll be heading to a MBA program in 2015. It's M7 or bust, to be honest... Strengthening the resume now and getting work experience that would make me an attractive candidate. You really have to be strategic with it.
Agree. Top-5 is being much too conservative, any law school in the top-15 will make you great money. The University of Michigan's 2010 law graduates had a post-graduation employment rate of 98.6 percent
Also, what are you doing to beef up your resume? What are your career aspirations? I'm just curious, I'm thinking of going either the MBA or JD route.
Only thing that matters is GPA and LSAT. Certain majors get more leeway when it comes to gpa though(engineering, hard sciences, etc.).Originally Posted by fredo777
Ok, hopefully someone can give me some advice. I'm currently a freshman in college and getting all my basics out of the way while I'm searching for what I would like to do with my life. Well, I know what I want to do but I know that what I WANT to do might not pan out so well so I'm looking for more of a backup plan. So my question is this, how much does it matter what your undergrad major is when applying to law schools? Like for example would an art major have less of a chance of getting into a good law school than say a business major?
Word?!?! I graduate in December from OT school. Where are you practicing and what setting?Originally Posted by THE ANOMOLIE
Allied Health. Im an Occupational Therapist, a great profession.
a part-time MBA = piece of paper.Originally Posted by eplaya06
For part-time rankings, use USNews. BusinessWeek's Part-time rankings are horrible. The top part-time schools also have top full-time programs. Not every school has a part-time program, so that's why certain programs(Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, MIT) are missing.Originally Posted by Antidope
Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame
MBA from top 5 business school> all
lock thread.
MBA from school below T30 = piece of paper.
Does this apply for both part and full times? Cause the rankings are different for each
http://grad-schools.usnew...hools/part-time-rankings
I went to a career fair last week and was told by Georgia Tech Reps that a full time MBA and part time MBA get you the same degree. So if you were to complete the program in two years how would they know?Originally Posted by ThrowedInDaGame
a part-time MBA = piece of paper.Originally Posted by eplaya06
For part-time rankings, use USNews. BusinessWeek's Part-time rankings are horrible. The top part-time schools also have top full-time programs. Not every school has a part-time program, so that's why certain programs(Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, MIT) are missing.Originally Posted by Antidope
Does this apply for both part and full times? Cause the rankings are different for each
http://grad-schools.usnew...hools/part-time-rankings
Goodluck getting a job at McKinsey, GE, or Google, or Goldman Sachs with a part-time MBA
Your better off not going back to school if you can not go full time.
Think about the opporutnity cost of lost income and how much money you stand to make with an executive "MBA" vs. a real MBA.
Originally Posted by Coolidge Effect
Originally Posted by omgitswes
Same thing here.
I want to go to Vandy so bad to get my MBA but they don't have Information Systems. So I was thinking maybe get it in Management. No idea how well those two will play together, get my Bachelors in MIS and a MBA in business management.
What do you guys think?
I'm doing my MBA right now and I feel like all my management courses are a waste of time teaching you common sense on how to manage people. But, my concentration is in Finance, so my opinion may be biased.
propsOriginally Posted by CMBWHODI
Just got into Yale for my MBA and am waiting to hear back from Tuck (Dartmouth) ... I am a career changer, trying to go into IB, I know how hard it is so this is just the beginning. IF you do not go somewhere where the BIG names in your industry of choice recruit, you may as well not even go.
Ps, any Yale/Tuck alumni, hit me up.