YesThat is a bit odd that accounting firms would recruit at UCLA when the students didnt take a single financial or managerial accounting class. I think you can be an econ major at UCLA but i am assuming Anderson doesnt allow undergrads to take business courses there.
Qwerty did you study accounting at Marshall?
Qwerty, let me ask you an honest question. Let's say your son applied to USC Marshall School of Business as a high school senior and got it. Let's also say that your household income is right at the threshold where you will not recieve any financial aid or grants from the school. The price tag to send your son to USC for four years is $342,592. Would you send your son there? Do you feel that this is a good investment?
Panda - my kids wills not be getting any financial aid. We make too much money so that is certain. It depends on the major. For either kid, I would pay a private school tuition if it was a very good/elite private school AND it was major that could generate a very good income (computer science, engineering, finance/accounting, etc). I will not send them to an any private school for a liberal arts type major. The only exceptions perhaps would be if they got into Stanford/harvard. If they wanted to be a lawyer/doctor I don’t think the undergrad is that important so ideally an in state public school for undergrad would doQwerty, let me ask you an honest question. Let's say your son applied to USC Marshall School of Business as a high school senior and got it. Let's also say that your household income is right at the threshold where you will not recieve any financial aid or grants from the school. The price tag to send your son to USC for four years is $342,592. Would you send your son there? Do you feel that this is a good investment?
Not sure if you guys know how the big 4 accounting firms work, regional recruiting is very important as the top 10 accounting schools don’t provide anywhere near the quantity of employees needed on a national basis for the firms as a whole for a new starting class every year. The firms have a very high turnover rate due to the demanding hours.If your kid got into accounting at UT Austin would you pick it?
It is supposedly #1 in accounting.
However....
In state TX tuition is $11,698
Out state tuition is $41,070
Yes, I would send them to Michigan for a business degree. It would be akin to sending them to USC so I would not have an issue with that. With that said; if they were getting mediocre grades at USC or Michigan I would pulll them out and have them transfer to a state school in CA. Going to a top school and getting bad grades will not result in a good paying job so no point in paying the money without the payoff of good career earnings. That happened to a friend of mine at USC. We were really good friends our freshman year but he did not get good grades. His mom was a management consultant at Anderson and said I’m not paying USC prices for you to get on academic probation. She pulled him out and sent him to a state school in Indiana. Never saw him again. He was never the type that was motivated by money or making. A lot of money, he played the guitar and wanted to do something in music. His mom probably should have known better than to send him to USC, perhaps she thought going there would change his view of things but it did not.What if your kid got into the Ross School of Business at University of Michigan, would you send your kid there? Supposedly in the top 3 business programs for undergraduate students. Qwerty, if your son got into USC Marshall School of Business, would you send him there? (Cost of Attendance $342,592)
However...
In state MI tuition is $16,736
Out state tuition is $55,034
Back in the late 90s, when I was a undergraduate student at Ross, the In state tuition was around $5000 and out-of-state was around $15,000. Had I attended Business School in-state at Univ of Illinois, my dad would have only paid $4700 and saved $40,000. Did I receive a business education that was 300% better at Ross vs University of Illinois? Certainly not, maybe 10-20% better at most. My dad never had a father to son talk with me of how he can save $40,000 is if I studied business at a in state school. Perhaps he could of said, if you study business at U of I rather than attending Ross, I can apply that $40k towards your first real estate purchase.
Looking back, wish my dad kept that extra $40,000 sending me out of state and spent it on himself before going to heaven.
USC is not a target school for Wall St firms but very much so for accounting and consulting (not McKinsey but Deloitte/ Accenture etc). A USC Computer Science degree with a business minor is the highest ROI degree you can get from USC - I lack the business minor but more than made up for it as an extroverted personality espousing my leadership qualities at the engineering career fair and subsequent interviews. Sounds like this is the path MK Bruin went but veered into the investment biz. Tech Sales or being a product manager at a big tech firm is how you really harvest that credential. Accounting is only good as a career stop before law school or a top 5 MBA program or becoming the next usctrojancpa Irvine RE king. Big 4 life blows. Consulting life too.Yes, I would send them to Michigan for a business degree. It would be akin to sending them to USC so I would not have an issue with that. With that said; if they were getting mediocre grades at USC or Michigan I would pulll them out and have them transfer to a state school in CA. Going to a top school and getting bad grades will not result in a good paying job so no point in paying the money without the payoff of good career earnings. That happened to a friend of mine at USC. We were really good friends our freshman year but he did not get good grades. His mom was a management consultant at Anderson and said I’m not paying USC prices for you to get on academic probation. She pulled him out and sent him to a state school in Indiana. Never saw him again. He was never the type that was motivated by money or making. A lot of money, he played the guitar and wanted to do something in music. His mom probably should have known better than to send him to USC, perhaps she thought going there would change his view of things but it did not.
My parents grew up in OC and used to call Irvine the boonies...now look at it! Haha.Funny thing is we actually drove to Irvine to look at houses back then, and my parents commented "these new homes are nice but this is in the middle of the farm". We ended up buying a townhome in Buena Park.
My parents grew up in OC and used to call Irvine the boonies...now look at it! Haha.
You are correct sir…used my CS background and applied it to trading and analysis but personality helped build my career. South campus UCLA was full of nerds. Personality goes a long ways…USC is not a target school for Wall St firms but very much so for accounting and consulting (not McKinsey but Deloitte/ Accenture etc). A USC Computer Science degree with a business minor is the highest ROI degree you can get from USC - I lack the business minor but more than made up for it as an extroverted personality espousing my leadership qualities at the engineering career fair and subsequent interviews. Sounds like this is the path MK Bruin went but veered into the investment biz. Tech Sales or being a product manager at a big tech firm is how you really harvest that credential. Accounting is only good as a career stop before law school or a top 5 MBA program or becoming the next usctrojancpa Irvine RE king. Big 4 life blows. Consulting life too.
I was going to follow up with this. Long Beach was really good about encouraging internships and helping people get placed. Are the UC's good at providing internships?
I went to UC Berkeley and the career services were minimal. I found my internships the old fashioned way (networking).
I think Cal is a great platform with a lot of opportunities, but with very little handholding.
BTW the business courses at Berkeley were extremely easy once you got into the major (which was the hard part). My math/engineering classmates viewed them as easy As with insane grade inflation. Of course, in retrospect, those easy classes I took in accounting, finance, marketing, and entrepreneurship were actually way more useful in real life to me than the hard classes I took in abstract algebra or whatever.