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Sep 09 2011

Chances of getting into a top business school?

My undergrad GPA was a 3. 1, but my Master’s (MSA – Tax) GPA will be anywhere from a 3. 48 – 3. 67. I’m locked into a job with a Big 4 accounting firm for the next three years. Assuming I get at least a 700 on my GMAT (I want to retake the exam to get into business school), what do you think my chances would be of getting into, say, Stanford, NYU, U of Chicago, or Wharton in three to four years?

This conversation was published at Accounting Services of Charlotte, NC

Sep 08 2011

How can we get business investment in school to be profitable?

Although I’m no strategist/economist/education specialist, I think it would work something like this. . A company can choose to invest in a school (tax incentives aimed at the poorest first) but must make a minimum contribution of $3/student (they could just do an entire grade). So X Company would need about $300 to invest in the senior class at Y High School. $1 would go into a sort of stock portfolio as investment to profit the company (this is the trickiest part as I am not an economist/banker), $1 into school funding, and $1 into a savings fund for the school. At the end of the year, the students who have achieved the desired goals set by the school (attendance, participation, test scores, extracurricular) will get the money. $1 is not going to be much of an incentive to do well, but if 100 businesses (min. $3 a student) contributed, each student would be getting $100. It’s not perfect, but let me know what you think, & show me how to make it profitable for the businesses.
To the first person who replied. Our education system leaves minorities and poor districts behind. In the past, reform has been aimed at getting the school administration and teachers to teach better. This is an attempt to put the ball in the students court. If the idea of money is too much, other rewards could be used. Taxes are not “investement. ” Plus, under this system, companies would receive tax breaks (which will promote growth in itself) for investing in schools. The result is SOME intelligent, trainable young people, and some who are, due to inequality of education, left behind–despite the No Child Left Behind Policy. Thank you for your rude reply that allowed me to clarify my intent.

This conversation was published at Accounting Services of Charlotte, NC

Aug 20 2011

Can my child go to the school district where my business is located?

The school district where we live is undesirable. My business is located in the next town over, which has a great school. My child hasn’t started school yet. Someone told me that they think I could send her where my business is located because I pay property taxes there. I was wondering if that was true. If it is, it would take a lot off my mind :) I live in Central NY state.

This conversation was published at Accounting Services of Charlotte, NC

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