Building Alternative Transcript and schools

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Building Alternative Transcript and schools

by unoman245 » Sat Jul 24, 2010 11:39 am
Hi Lisa,

Thank you for responding to so many posts. It has been great to get a basis for what I need to do to overcome my GPA.

I have two questions: I understand it is best to take quant courses like Stats and Calculus in building an alternative transcript, but what about the type or prestige of the university, does that matter? I also can only take online courses due to frequent international travel for work. I work for the Fed Government and am deciding between taking online courses at the Graduate School at USDA for relatively cheap versus taking online courses at UC Berkeley extension for three times the price.

The other question, is whether I am just crazy or have a realistic shot at getting accepted to a top 5 b-school (or top-10) with the below credentials.

GPA: 2.9 from Ivy; double major Econ and Sociology (just immature, but GPA did increase to 3.3 for last couple semesters)
GMAT: 720 (49 quant; 40 verbal)
Job: Five years with progressive responsibility/promotion, significant work in banking in developing countries, and was an acting manager for a year where I oversaw our biggest year in by two-fold.
Extra Curriculars: No regular EC due to travel again, but started a small, small art business with my wife and am writing a travelogue/cookbook.
I expect to have good recommendations and am decent at essay writing

Thank you for the help! greatly appreciate the service you do for everyone on these posts.
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by Lisa Anderson » Mon Jul 26, 2010 2:30 pm
Dear unoman245,

Where you take your courses is really not a significant factor in the evaluation. What is important is what you take and how well you do in the course. So, many folks take online courses now due to work requirements like you have, and often they take the courses at a community college.

Whether or not you have a realistic chance of being accepted at a top 10 will greatly depend on how well you put your application package together, what the rest of the applicant pool looks like, and what the school(s) is desiring for its class profile. You can't control the latter two items, but you can control your application. Based on your post, the foundation for a competitive application is there, so it is a matter of how well you pick your recommenders, how strong your essays are, and how your interviews go. Choose schools wisely ensuring you are picking ones that are a good match for you and your goals. Likewise, think about having the right mix of schools on your target list as top 10 schools are highly selective and there are no guarantees. You will want to to have some solid reasonable and safety options as well.

Best of luck,
Lisa
Lisa Anderson
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Stacy Blackman Consulting

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