Undergraduate real estate programs

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The study of real estate at the undergraduate level is commonly contained as a degree of Bachelor of Science in Real Estate or a Bachelor of Business Administration with a concentration in real estate. A very limited number of universities, such as Florida State University, New York University, University of Southern California and Virginia Commonwealth University offer a full "Bachelor of Science in Real Estate" and have true "Real Estate" departments in their respective Colleges within the University.[1][2] With the maturity of Master of Real Estate Development programs, universities are now looking at also offering specialized undergraduate education in real estate.

Many of the programs ranked by U.S. News and World Report are Bachelor of Business Administration or Bachelor of Science programs though some, such as University of Florida, Cornell University, and University of Illinois, only offer minors in Real Estate or majors in Finance "with emphasis in Real Estate".[3][4][5] While business schools continue to attract future real estate professionals, many critics of business education have many complaints. Some say the schools have become too scientific, too detached from real-world issues. Others say students are taught to come up with hasty solutions to complicated problems. Another group contends that schools give students a limited and distorted view of their role - that they graduate with a focus on maximizing shareholder value and only a limited understanding of ethical and social considerations essential to business leadership. Such shortcomings may have left business school graduates inadequately prepared to make the decisions that, taken together, might have helped mitigate the financial and real estate crisis, critics say.[6] An alternative course of study to an undergraduate degree in business or real estate is the liberal arts, such as economics, public administration, urban planning, or geography. An aspiring real estate professional may supplement his education with a Master of Real Estate Development degree, a common prerequisite for many institutional and corporate real estate firms.

Business school rankings

The U.S. News and World Report ranks the top 14 undergraduate programs which offer a study in real estate.[7] However, many schools on the U.S. News and World Reports list (University of Florida, for example) [8] do not actually offer undergraduate degrees (majors) in Real Estate, and alternatively run a "focus" or "minor" in Real Estate under their Finance departments. Additionally there are many non-business schools that offer other real estate related degrees. The International Council of Shopping Centers provides an alternative list of active "Real Estate" institutions: http://www.icsc.org/student/resources_undergrad.php

2014 US&WR ranked undergraduate programs
Ranking University Business school
1 University of Wisconsin–Madison Wisconsin School of Business
2 University of Pennsylvania[Note 1] Wharton School
3 University of California, Berkeley Haas School of Business
3 University of Georgia Terry College of Business
5 University of Southern California[Note 1] Marshall School of Business
6 New York University[Note 1] Stern School of Business
7 University of Florida Warrington College of Business Administration
8 University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business
9 University of Connecticut School of Business
10 Georgia State University Robinson College of Business
11 University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign College of Business
12 Florida State University College of Business
13 Indiana University Kelley School of Business
14 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Kenan–Flagler Business School

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Private institution

References

  1. http://www.cob.fsu.edu/content/download/169088/1479911/file/REE-2014-2015.pdf
  2. http://bus.wisc.edu/bba/academics-and-programs/majors/real-estate
  3. http://warrington.ufl.edu/departments/fire/
  4. http://www.realestate.cornell.edu/
  5. http://www.business.illinois.edu/finance/courses9.aspx
  6. http://network.nationalpost.com/NP/blogs/fpposted/archive/2010/03/17/why-a-liberal-arts-education-can-best-prepare-business-leaders.aspx
  7. http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business-real-estate
  8. http://warrington.ufl.edu/departments/fire/