U of I is still a much more difficult school to get into than IU, generally. From these stats, it looks like UI ranks higher primarily because they have tighter standards to admit to the biz school.Based on what criteria? P&G has them on par--Gies actually ranked higher due to more rigorous selection criteria for admits. Very similar in student experiences and career outcomes.Gies is not on par with Kelley.
that is skewing P&Q. You know as well as I do that U of I had long been a much more difficult school to get into because if supply/demand and quality of Chicagoland applicants.
Kelley is the better school. Now, for the average corporate job or even accounting or consulting job, that probably doesn’t matter a ton.
If she is trying to go into high finance, IU has a much larger network, more disciplined prep and training, and better recruiting.
it ultimately comes down to what she wants to do, but she’ll have opportunities at either
My daughter isn't the high finance type. She has no intrinsic interest in business--hell, she's already talking about switching to psych or poly sci.
Based on what criteria? P&G has them on par--Gies actually ranked higher due to more rigorous selection criteria for admits. Very similar in student experiences and career outcomes.Gies is not on par with Kelley.
that is skewing P&Q. You know as well as I do that U of I had long been a much more difficult school to get into because if supply/demand and quality of Chicagoland applicants.
Kelley is the better school. Now, for the average corporate job or even accounting or consulting job, that probably doesn’t matter a ton.
If she is trying to go into high finance, IU has a much larger network, more disciplined prep and training, and better recruiting.
it ultimately comes down to what she wants to do, but she’ll have opportunities at either
The move used to be to apply to the U of I agriculture school and then transfer into the B-School.
I think eventually UI admissions caught on that all these Chicago area kids didn’t actually want to be farmers.
