savithav wrote:
Hi, I have been discouraged a lot during my Preparation for my GMAT scheduled Dec 9th 2010.
I am Indian Female 26 years of age
Did my undergrad in a top 20 engineerg school in India (Bachelors in Computer Science Engg) with a very low gpa or 5.65 on a scale of 10.(Reason being my mom passed away during my first year)
I later on joined a business school which awards post graduation diploma in business administration (PGDBA - most schools in India offer this and not MBA's) with specialization in telecom management with a gpa of 72 on a scale of 100 ...
I got placed through my business school in a telecom organisation and worked for 2 years as Senior Executive Product Management with a recognition award for excellence.
I later got married to a guy living in USA and came over to USA in June 2010. I cannot work here as I am on dependent visa. So I thought I should do a MBA here in supply chain to improvise my skills and get a work visa of my own ... hence started preparing for GMAT and scheduled the same for Dec 9th 2010. In the course of my preparation I have been meeting ppl and everyone seem to think that I have a very tough chance in getting into a good school due to my Low GPA and also the fact that I already have a Graduate degree in Business, low experience(2 years) and presently jobless(because I cannot work on a dependent visa)
I am looking at the following schools and my GMAT is in the range of 670-720 in my practice exams.
1) UC Davis
2) USC MArshall
3) ASU
4) Thunderbird
5) UC Irvine
6) UW - Foster
Can you please Advise me as to what my chances are in getting into one of the above schools. Will my existing business degree and low undergrad gpa(was depressed due to my mom's demise) and low experience(2 years) and presently jobless(because I cannot work on a dependant visa) hamper my prospect of getting into a good school ?
Should I even put any efforts to write my GMAT ?
Your frank reply would be greatly appreciated.
In short, yes.
I do think that given your target programs, anticipated GMAT, and your good grades in the PGDBA, that the schools will understand that you had a problem as an undergrad so your transcript is not indicative of your ability. I would also encourage you to simply ask the schools if your PGDBA means you should not apply. (If they say you shouldn't, don't.) For the UC schools a prior MBA almost always means you are not admissible; I am not sure the PGDBA is viewed in the same light. Regarding your current unemployment, again it depends on the quality of your work experience in India as well as on what you are doing here. If you are using the current period of unemployment to volunteer, acquire new skills, and grow in other ways, your unemployed status will have less impact than if you appear to be stagnating. Can all these elements together impede your ability to get accepted? You can only find out by taking the GMAT and submitting an application that is top-notch in other ways.
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