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powerfool wrote: » Unless the MBA program is from a top 25 MBA school, I wouldn't go to the same university for the MBA as the undergrad unless you really had few opportunities, but that is just me (and what I have seen as beneficial for others). I understand that many schools offer incentives if you were a business undergrad with them, but they typically offer those same benefits to others. My alma mater, for instance, advertises that they allow undergrad alums to waive 5 equivalent grad courses if they had a grade of B or better... but they extend that to anyone from a regionally accredited school. It was tempting, and still is, but I am just not sure I see the benefit. The big thing is that there are TONS of folks with MBAs, now and they are all complaining that they cannot find work, etc... well, they likely couldn't find work before they had an MBA, too. They decided to go to the closest most convenient school and are not seeing value from it. That is why, especially for an MBA (and it applies to law schools, as well) is that you should go to the absolute best school that you can afford (affording respective to money, time, and any other factor that limits your ability to go to a school). There are a lot of geographies that don't have top 25 schools... they are centered in the mid-east/northeast, California, Chicago, one in Texas, and two in Indiana... so that does make things difficult. Many of these top schools are offering some online programs and executive MBA programs that meet on a limited schedule (usually one extended weekend per month and a couple of two weeks stints).
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