Business Schools Journal

Category — Business Programs

How Relevant is Your Degree?

When you are ready to commit a significant portion of your time and money to getting an MBA, you want to make sure you’re getting an education that’s going to transform your talent and ambition into a solid set of skills that deem you irresistible to the best employers. Business schools are competing to make their MBAs the most relevant to your success.

This month the MBA Roundtable released the results of its 2009 MBA Curricular Innovation Study indicating that 69% of MBA programs have significantly revised the curriculum in the past four years to improve the relevancy of the degree in response to criticism that they are not preparing graduates for today’s business challenges.

What Is Relevance?

Among the 69% of MBA programs making significant revisions to their curriculum, the most common change was the addition of ‘applied content’, or project-based courses. In addition to giving students more opportunities to take their learning out of the comfortable lecture hall and into the demanding real-world business simulations, respondents also reported that integration across topics and disciplines, as well as interdisciplinary content were popular changes.

MBA Programs That Get Into Details

MBA programs have traditionally focused on equipping students with big picture concepts, eschewing fine details of specific industries for personal leadership and decision making skills. Apparently that’s changing. The MBA Roundtable data reveals that 25% of MBA degree programs have added an industry specialization in the past three years. Common emphasis areas are healthcare, biotech, medicine, and entrepreneurship. Another change: about half the programs reported that they had added a focus on leadership development (as in, developing others) and global perspectives to their offerings.

Change is Good

And the changes just keep coming. 89% of all MBA programs surveyed are planning additional curricular changes.

“I think this is very promising news,” said Rodney Alsup, president of the MBA Roundtable. “It shows that there has been a concentrated effort among MBA programs to innovate and make changes that increase their relevance to both students and employers. Furthermore, this has been done in an educational environment that can be resistant to change, or, at the very least, has approval processes that make it difficult to make changes in a timely manner. Some schools need approval from their state boards of education prior to revising their curricula, for example.”

The motivation for these changes comes from both internal and external sources, according to the study. The most common motivator by far was internal quality improvement initiatives, with 64% of participants selecting it as one of their motivators. Among external motivators, “competitor schools” was the most commonly chosen answer, with 34% of respondents choosing it as one of their motivators.

If  you want to know more, check out all the results at www.mbaroundtable.org/events_preview.html.

August 13, 2009   Comments Off

Moore Offers Top Intenational Business Programs

Looking for a great international business program at a public school? The Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina has been recognized as the top international MBA program at any public university in the United States. This is the result of the U.S. News & World Report’s America’s Best Graduate Schools 2010.

A History of Excellence

Moore has been ranked among the top two in the category for the past twenty years. This year, in terms of international business, they beat out all these heavy hitters:

  • University of Pennsylvania (Wharton)
  • University of Michigan-Ann Arbor (Ross)
  • Columbia University
  • Duke University (Fuqua)
  • New York University (Stern)
  • Harvard Business School
  • University of Southern California (Marshall)
  • University of California-Berkeley (Haas)

In addition to the top marks for their international business program, the Moore School also moved into the Top 25 among the top business schools at the nation’s public universities.

New International Programs at Moore

The latest ranking comes on the heels of the Moore’s announcement of two new international business programs for the fall.

The Master of International Business (MIB)
This a unique one-year graduate program will be offered jointly with the political science department and the School of Law to provide students with an advanced understanding of the interaction between business, government and society. Courses are approached from an interdisciplinary view so that students gain practice in applying socio-cultural, political and economic perspectives to a rich variety of international management issues including overseas trade and investment and the operation and role of multinational firms in the global economy.

International Business and Chinese Enterprise (IBCE)
This collaborative program partners with the Chinese University of Hong Kong for undergraduates and includes two years of study in Hong Kong, along with intensive language and cultural training.

“These new offerings are continuing evidence of the Moore School’s innovative leadership in international business education,” said Moore School Dean Hildy Teegen. “We are pleased that this leadership is further recognized by U.S. News and we look forward to building on this position with the development of new international programs in the future.”About The Moore School of Business

The Moore School of Business is a comprehensive business school with more than 4,200 students in its undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral programs, and 38,000 living alumni around the world. The Executive Education program last year provided approximately 90 programs for 2,500 executives and government leaders. The Moore School’s undergraduate program in International Business is ranked #1 by U.S. News & World Report and, in the category of “international experience,” the School’s MBA program is ranked second among all business schools globally and first in the U.S. by the Financial Times.

May 15, 2009   Comments Off

Considering the CFA? Check out Partner Schools

If you’re wondering whether you should pursue the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) credential in place of the more traditional MBA, you may want to work toward both at a CFA partner school.

Passing the series of CFA exams demonstrates that you have the technical skills to succeed in asset or investment management, specifically in the field of investment banking. Getting your MBA prepares you for a broad range of challenges in the business world, especially the so called ‘softer’, yet crucially important leadership and people skills.

The MBA and CFA are actually quite complimentary designations.  This is why the CFA Institute has created specialized resources to help university offer the CFA Program Candidate Body of Knowledge (CBOK) as part of their business programs. The following North American colleges and universities currently offer CBOK curriculum.

Northeast

Southeast

Midwest

West

Canada

March 5, 2009   Comments Off

Business Degree Options – Associates through PhD

Depending on your current level of training and education, you have several different choices of business degrees. Any business degree will provide practical skills in business as well as some real world experience, but there are vast difference in the depth of instruction from Associates Degrees all the way up to PhDs. Your decision will be based on your interests, qualifications and goals.

On Campus vs. Online Study

The first decision you might make is whether to pursue a traditional course of study on a physical campus or to get your degree in the ever more popular online arena. Regardless of which you choose, a business degree program will typically include courses in accounting, finance, management, marketing, analysis, and computer applications. You may also study organizational behavior, ethics, social interaction, and research methods. [Read more →]

December 9, 2008   1 Comment

Business Education Is Free With OpenCourseWare

Do you really need that business degree? Or could you make due with the knowledge alone? If you’re a self-motivated learner, OpenCourseWare lets you get quite a business education using nothing more than a good library and a computer.

OpenCourseWare is free and open online publication of high quality educational materials offered by some of the top universities in the world. Many high ranking schools are putting entire courses online. You can easily download syllabi, reading lists, labs, assignment, and exams online. Streaming video lectures are even available for some courses.

It’s all free for the taking. No pesky registration or prerequisites required. [Read more →]

February 26, 2008   3 Comments