Dear Future Business Leader,
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New Trends, New Courses – Deeper, Smaller, Broader
During the recent two years, many business schools have revamped or retooled the curriculum of their MBA programs. This is designed to better prepare students to manage and thrive on new challenges in an ever-changing global business world through a more profound intellectual experience and more effective training on leadership development. These modifications allow students to customize their MBA programs with a greater selection of electives, an increased number of half-semester core courses, more exchange programs for studying aboard, smaller classes, a closer integration of in-person and online class participation, and more week-long intensive courses.
Deeper, Smaller, Broader
So what are those key improvements? In a nutshell, MBA curriculums have been remodeled in 4 major aspects:
Content – More real-world relevant courses, more interdisciplinary courses (such as legal and international relations courses), and more collaborative effort - Harvard Business School, for example, offers the opportunity to cross-register for courses in other select graduate programs. So do many other top business schools. More extra-curricular lectures from business professionals and on-site projects with corporations or governments.
Configuration – Broader spectrum of electives allow you to construct your own study program and make your B-school academic experience unique. The weight of core courses as requirements for the degree is lowering. Many core courses are also offered in half-semesters to let you take many different courses within a semester’s time. For example, about half of Columbia Business School’s core courses are half-semester.
Delivery – More high-tech equipped classrooms with more frequent use of the Internet. Smaller class sizes. Classes are taught in seminars that maximize active participation and deeper intellectual involvement. More courses are taught by two or more faculty members as a team.
More interaction with faculty advisors. For example, at Stanford Graduate School of Business, your faculty advisor partners with you to select the courses that fit with your personal background and interests.
Format – New curriculum models. For example, Yale’s MBA Program did away with the traditional self-contained subject courses such as marketing, finance, and organizational behavior. Instead it starts to offer an Integrated Leadership Perspective course focusing on managing internal and external parties such as all levels of employees, customers, competitors, and investors. The goal is to tie together all that students learned in the first year in a holistic manner.
We will continue our discussion on new MBA curriculums in our next edition of InFocus newsletter.
Kind regards,
Manhattan Review Team
Manhattan Review US <www.manhattanreview.com>
V 212-997-1660
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