What Women Want in an MBA: Financial Aid and Flexibility
In honor of last Wednesday’s International Women’s Day, the Graduate Management Admission Council (GMAC) today released a new report entitled “What Women Want: A Blueprint for Change in Business Education.” For readers who may be too young to remember the 2000 romantic comedy also called “What Women Want,” it starred Mel Gibson as a chauvinistic advertising executive who suffers a blow to the head that renders him suddenly able to hear everything women around him are thinking. Though first instinct would be to assume that the two—Gibson’s rom-com and GMAC’s research—have nothing at all to do with one another, that’s not entirely true.
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Gabelli Addresses Sustainability and Social Entrepreneurship, Wins AACSB Award
Gabelli School of Business recently celebrated the school’s win at AACSB Award winning 2017 Innovations That Inspire initiative, created to “shine a spotlight on a variety of ways that business schools are changing the face of business education.”
Terry Women’s Initiative Named ‘Innovation that Inspires’ by AACSB
The University of Georgia – Terry College of Business‘ women’s initiative was recently honored by AACSB International as an “innovation that inspires.”
Canadian Business Schools Struggle in Latest Financial Times MBA Rankings
The newest batch of rankings from the Financial Times has been revealed, and the results aren’t very encouraging if you’re a Canadian business school. In fact, only three schools out of Canada’s 22 Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) accredited schools made the 2017 ranking of the world’s best full-time MBA programs. Continue reading…
MBA Scholars Award at Mays Honors 4.0 MBA Graduates
The Texas A&M University – Mays Business School recently honored ten business students with the MBA Scholar Award, a new award intended to honor MBA students who graduate with a 4.0.
Commerce College Ranked As Top Value MBA
The Texas A&M University – Commerce College of Business recently named a top value among both undergraduate and graduate business degrees.