If you can be admitted to Haas Business School in Berkeley, it will be really famous; However, it is too difficult for transfer students. I mean the undergraduate program of Haas University. It will be easier to get an MBA from a business school after entering, but some people say that the undergraduate courses are too narrow, only accounting, finance and management.
In this way, you can consider entering Berkeley. Before your junior year (before 80 credits), there are three situations that suit you:
First: Enter Berkeley, attend the Department of Economics, and take more courses in mathematics and statistics by the way, so as to lay a good foundation for future accounting. Graduate students apply for MBA in Haas Business School.
Second: Enter Berkeley and participate in Operation &; The management department, which we call a half-baked business school, mostly studies management and industrial computing. Graduate student hasmba
Third: entering Berkeley, majoring in statistics, and taking an accounting class if possible are all priorities for business school students. Don't worry, I have been to all four job fairs. Most of them come from statistics, and few from business schools.
There is also a pure scientific accountant, but it is a question whether he can apply for classes.
Berkeley's economics, mathematics and statistics are among the best in the United States, so don't be afraid.
Southern California? It's a upstart. It's not as thick as Berkeley. But I don't know much about it, so I won't comment much.
PS: Downstairs: There are indeed many people in the big class, but only freshmen and sophomores have such a spectacular phenomenon. When you say graduate student, you mean our GSI. Really, don't talk nonsense until you have been to Berkeley. Our lectures are all taught by serious professors. The class of 100 students is divided into small classes of 10 students only (the course structure is several lectures+several discussion classes a week), and each small class is led by Dr. GSI. And the quality of Berkeley undergraduate course is still questioned? ! It's called Harvard for the poor. The difficulty of our course is recognized in America. Often, the average score of a class's mid-term exam is only 10 ~ 20% of the total score, and the average score can be about 70%, so it has always been rated as Yishui class. By the way, I'm tired of watching you mix Chinese and English.