Yale, Harvard, Stanford Law schools

<p>does anyone what is the average annual admits from UC Berkeley to get admitted into each of these law schools?
Thanks :)</p>

<p>If you plan on becoming successful enough to get into those, you should learn now to be a little more resourceful and a little less lazy. :)</p>

<p><a href=“https://career.berkeley.edu/Law/LawStats.stm[/url]”>https://career.berkeley.edu/Law/LawStats.stm&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>^ hahaha +1 to blueducky</p>

<p>Do they have anything similar for business school statistics from UCB? Yes, I did look and search through the link above, but I could not find the admissions statistics from UCB to business schools. </p>

<p>Thanks guys!</p>

<p>^^ I don’t think any schools will provide records of that since most people don’t go into business school until they have worked 2-4 years. Very rarely does a student go straight into business school from undergrad.</p>

<p>Yeah that’s true. I want to go into Organizational Behavior, so that’s why I was wondering. I don’t want to take the traditional business school route because I’m interested in become a researcher/professor and making a career in academia.</p>

<p>Then you should want to enter a PhD program, either at a business school, or possibly a policy school or a pure sociology department. You have little reason to obtain an MBA or, frankly, to even obtain work experience, except possibly as a research assistant. </p>

<p>{And yes, it’s a well-established irony that most business-school professors who teach MBA students don’t have MBA degrees themselves, nor do they have significant work experience. But what can I say - I didn’t make the rules.}</p>

<p>Yeah, I intend to aim for my PhD in Organizational Behavior. However, that’s only a program offered in Business and Management schools. I’m looking most seriously into U of Chicago, Northwestern, U of Illinois, and of course, UCB. </p>

<p>First, it would probably be best to get into UCB as a transfer student for my last 2 years of undergrad lol.</p>

<p>I’m still debating though between med school (psychiatry) and Organizational Behavior. Choices choices…</p>