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Graduate schools are going to be more selective in who they accept, so, in general, they will be the "hardest". If you do well in undergrad, you will not have a problem getting in though. If you plan on going to graduate school after, don't wait to see what the requirements are. Start early in undergrad, talking to counselors (where you plan to attend) about your plans, no later than the beginning of your Junior year ( or earlier but your Junior year will 'peak" their interest more). Set your goals and stick to them!

2007-04-04 09:56:48 · answer #1 · answered by Just be you. Go for the stars! 2 · 0 0

Since you can't get into graduate school without having gone to an undergraduate school -- the answer is obvious.

That being said -- I did not do well in High School and didn't go to a very good one. But I did well in math and well on my SATs so got into Villanova. I did not apply to more selective schools -- and would not have got in.

But I did very well in college & got into some great graduate programs (Cornell, Duke, Berkeley, Minnesota). So -- for me, it was easier to get into a great graduate program than a great undergraduate program.

2007-04-04 17:06:13 · answer #2 · answered by Ranto 7 · 0 0

Graduate School. Always

2007-04-04 16:38:53 · answer #3 · answered by Drakus 2 · 0 0

depends on your grades, application, extracurriculars, work experience (grad), test scores, program and school... a lot of people slack during their undergrad program, making it tough to get into grad school

2007-04-04 16:44:59 · answer #4 · answered by lei 5 · 0 0

graduate school. its more expensive, too.

2007-04-04 16:42:22 · answer #5 · answered by Becca R 2 · 0 0

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