2010′s Best Undergraduate Business Schools

Attention possible college applicants! The results of the top undergraduate business schools of 2010 are in.

Coming in first place is the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business! They are located in Notre Dame, Indiana and are a private college whose annual cost of attendance is around $38,477. The faculty to student ratio is 1 professor per 18.5 students. They offer a four year program with a one or two year MBA program following. The median salary of their graduates is $55,000 a year. They offer programs in Accounting, Finance, Marketing, Management Consulting, Management Entrepreneurship, and Information Technology Management.

Following close behind Notre Dame is University of Virginia’s McIntire School of Commerce, a public campus located in Charlottesville, Virginia. Their annual cost of attendance is a much more manageable $9,872 for their four year program. They even boast a student to faculty ratio of 10.2 to 1 whose graduates’ median annual salary is $55,500. Their programs include Accounting, Finance, Information Technology, International Business, and Marketing. The last year of study is concentration specific.

Third place is awarded to the MIT Sloan School of Management found in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This private college has an annual attendance cost of around $37,782 with a student to faculty ratio of 1.8 to 1. Their graduates’ median salary is $62,000. The school offers a Bachelors of Science in Management and minors in Management and Management Science.

Not too far behind the pack is The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Their private campus can be found in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the four year program costs $38,970 annually to attend. Students can expect 11.1 classmates to 1 professor, and the annual median salary of its graduates is $60,000. Their four year program results in a Bachelors of Sciences in Economics with a specialization of the student’s choice, and choices they do offer! Students can choose from any of the following: Accounting, Actuarial Science, Business and Public Policy, Environmental Policy and Management, Finance, Global Analysis, Health Care Management and Policy, Insurance and Risk Management, Legal Studies and Business Ethics, Management (Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Multinational Management, Organizational Effectiveness, and Strategic Movement), Managing Electronic Commerce, Marketing, Marketing and Communication, Marketing and Operations Management, Operations and Information Management, Real Estate, Retailing, Social Impact and Responsibility, Statistics, and Transportation. Students also have the opportunity to create their own individualized concentration.

And last but certainly not least is the undergraduate program at Cornell University’s Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management. Their private campus in Ithaca, New York costs $21,814 to attend a year where one can expect 18.2 students to 1 faculty member. The four year program culminates in a Bachelors of Science in Applied Economics and Management that has allowed the graduates a median annual salary of $55,000. Concentrations available to students are Accounting, Agribusiness Management, Applied Economics, Entrepreneurship, Environmental and Resource Economics, Finance, Food Industry Management, International Trade and Development, Marketing, and Strategy.

Well, there you have it, folks! The top five undergraduate business programs and their schools of 2010. Now, prospective students, go forth and prosper wisely with your new information. Best of luck in your hunt for the perfect business school.

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