I absolutely do not recommend attending the business school at University of Utah. I am a Junior at the school and I graduate in December. I am a 3.55 student and I do put effort towards my classes to get the most out of them. Here are the reasons why you should attend a different school. 1. BCOR. You will hear about this program when you sign up for classes. BCOR is a set of courses at are specific only to the U. They represent basic classes like Finance, Entrepreneurship, Management, Marketing, Supply Chain, and Accounting. BCOR is the exact same curriculum as these classes. For example, BCOR 3020 Finance is the same as a finance class it is replacing. However, the BCOR class is NOT transferable in or out of the U. So if you take 5 BCOR classes your first year, you are a semester behind if you try to transfer. Keep in mind, they are THE EXACT same curriculum other than this entry BCOR 1010 super entry level class. They may try to make it sound special, it’s not. 2. Upper Division Tuition. Beware of this before you attend the U! The U does have access to this knowledge so they don’t necessarily hide it. I personally looked up average tuition for the university of Utah and it said $8000 a year. In high school, I didn’t think to look further into what I would be paying. (I paid $10500 last semester for 18 credits) ~ $17,000/year. I’m taking two summer classes this summer and it’s $4350. Upper division tuition starts your sophomore year and nothing has been very advanced and I have 21 credits left. Schools like ASU do not have this, it’s not an all around thing by the way. 3. Curriculum. Every time you tour a school they give you some good sounding statistic. “The University of ABC has the best business school in the coordinates between 1256.43 latitude, 3287.31 longitude in the Northeast side of the United States.” Anyways, whatever the U told me, I felt proud and accomplished to go there. That is, until I found myself thinking about what I learned after my first year-not really anything. I remember learning some basic excel, accounting, and economics. But not much more than a few YouTube videos worth. I am graduating in less than 12 months and I’d say I’ve had a few good classes and actually did enjoy my last semester, but there’s honestly not much special about this school’s program. Especially for paying double the tuition. 3. Business scholars. My last point I’ll talk about and it’s more for a specific course. I remember driving up to Utah and the university called me and asked if I wanted to join business scholars for an extra $1000/semester (now I think $2000/semester) It sounded so exclusive and cool! Company tours, traveling to Boeing, business presentations! I showed up on the first day of business scholars and there were so many students that they had to have two sections in the largest lecture room. We had some great trips, the trip to Seattle was truly awesome! We did one other company tour in the first semester to C.R. England. There were organized sections and every few weeks we had a good business presentation. Why am I upset about this? Well I’m not as furious about it as the other reasons, but it’s worth a read if you are considering joining. You are paying a lot more to take this extra class, you do gain some presentation skills and you get to learn a little about the different aspects of business. In our second semester, we did a ski day at brighton and due to Covid, we were sent home half way through the semester without ever doing company tours or allowing anyone to go to the Bryce/Zions trip. They refunded $0 which is extremely upsetting given they didn’t even provide any company tours or the trip. They straight pocketed some of that cash. Even if they could only refund each student $100 due to the cancellation in transportation costs, they should have done it. In accounting I learned that you can’t recognize revenue unless the service has been provided, so I don’t know where they put that on their balance sheet(; Google is telling me this review is getting too long so good luck!(:Caleb Meyer