• The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business counts over 13, 000 schools that offer business degrees in the world.

    ECONOMIST: Schumpeter

  • The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, the main business-school-accrediting agency, reports that the number of such programs is on the rise.

    WSJ: Alternatives to the M.B.A. Becoming More Popular

  • A.s from its college of arts and sciences, its schools of business, communication, education and religion, and graduate degrees in 15 programs, from an M.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Dr. Guthrie has held visiting positions at Harvard Business School, INSEAD and the graduate schools of business at Stanford University, Columbia University and Emory University.

    FORBES: Doug Guthrie - The View From Washington - Archive

  • It is a small but growing share of the roughly 13, 000 business degree-granting institutions world-wide, according to the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, an accrediting body.

    WSJ: More Business Schools Accept GRE

  • Even if recruiters do indicate expectations of more ethics curriculum, some say schools still won't change without clear marching orders from the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, the industry's main accrediting group.

    WSJ: Some B-Schools Step Up Efforts to Tie Ethics to Business Programs

  • Daniel LeClair, vice-president of the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, a business-school accreditation agency, says that its members are reaching out to graduates through alumni magazines, mentoring workshops and through the student job-search team.

    ECONOMIST: MBA careers special

  • The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, a 97-year-old nonprofit body that issues a seal of approval to business and accounting programs world-wide, says it needs the flexibility to support a growing group of programs from around the world.

    WSJ: B-School Accrediting Body Retools Its Standards

  • One would be a whopping capital-gains-tax bill enough to put most schools out of business overnight, causing a political and legal storm that even Labour left-wingers might flinch at.

    ECONOMIST: Are posh schools charities? Not necessarily

  • Criticism of how business schools may have helped create the end of the business world as we know it would seem to echo Gordon-Howell's point about the need for more emphasis on ethics.

    ECONOMIST: The Gordon-Howell report of 1959

  • That's why many of the student competitions so popular in business schools these days take the form of business pitches, generally in the form of small teams making well-rehearsed presentations before panels of experts.

    CNN: Going up! The elevator pitch

  • Long before he became dean, Mr Nohria lamented the failure of business schools to fulfil their mission of turning management into a profession similar to law or medicine.

    ECONOMIST: Harvard Business School reinvents its MBA course

  • The full-time MBA ranking published last month by BusinessWeek brings the 2012 season of media rankings of business schools to a close, and the results were met with the usual mix of joy, despair and skepticism by the business school community.

    FORBES: The Best Business Schools of 2012 - The Ranking of MBA Rankings

  • Results from a survey of 60 business schools -- 58 of them in the United States and one each in France and Canada -- conducted earlier this month found that 98% had seen increased recruiting activity during the fall and winter recruiting period compared to the same time a year before.

    CNN: More jobs, more money for 2006 MBAs

  • He has also become a resource for universities and business schools, like Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan, where students are looking for entry-level finance jobs.

    FORBES: Beyond LinkedIn: A New Site For Wall Street Jobs

  • Whether this is a proper focus for business education is being openly challenged by thought leaders such as Harvard's Clayton Christensen, whose books on innovation include The Innovator's Dilemma, and Rakesh Khurana, also of Harvard, author of From Higher Aims to Hired Hands: The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession.

    FORBES: Leadership

  • The thinking, say school administrators, is that international students who stay in academia will connect U.S. schools with new research partners, while those entering the corporate world may become clients of business schools' lucrative executive education programs.

    WSJ: Chinese Applicants Flood U.S. Graduate Schools

  • According to Aspen Institute, in 2007 63% of business schools in the United States offered courses on social enterprise or other aspects of the nexus between environmental, social and ethical considerations with business decisions.

    FORBES: Social Entrepreneurship: A Fundamental Game Changer

  • China has scores of its own business schools, which now attract thousands of students a year.

    WSJ: Western Business Schools Head to China

  • It does concern me if schools get in the business of monitoring the extracurricular speech, the extracurricular gossip that all high schools students engage in.

    NPR: School District to Police Students' Online Activities

  • Participant schools include usual suspects such as the multi-campus INSEAD and National University of Singapore's NUS Business School, both of which already have partnerships with other elite business schools.

    WSJ: Business School Bulletin: What's News from B-Schools

  • In many ways the executive education programs of the major business schools, for instance, attract students because of the research conducted by their professors supported by the institutes and research centers they establish.

    FORBES: How Executive Education Organizations Can Gain a Competitive Advantage

  • "The chance of getting into a top business school is 10% to 15%, " says Chioma Isiadinso, a former admissions board member at Harvard Business School and author of The Best Business Schools' Admissions Secrets.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Medical and law schools teach the value of pro bono work, business schools rarely do.

    ECONOMIST: The challenge for America��s rich

  • It is thus no surprise to see hedge funds come under the increasing scrutiny of business schools.

    CNN: Peering over the hedge

  • This methodology has been adopted by Forbes as the basis for their biennial ranking of business schools.

    FORBES: A Better Way to Rank Business Schools?

  • Japan had only a handful of business schools until recently, but this is creating new demand for business studies.

    ECONOMIST: Business studies in Japan

  • The school ranked eighth globally in the latest Financial Times survey of business schools, and it's ranked No. 1 in Asia.

    WSJ: Hong Kong M.B.A. Program Won Elite Status Fast

  • What radical new ideas do we see coming out of business schools in terms of how we could organise governance and boards better?

    FORBES: Should Business Schools Be Braver?

  • Drucker and Masatoshi Ito Graduate School of Management at Claremont Graduate University outside Los Angeles, believes mindfulness should be at the center of business schools' teaching.

    WSJ: Business Skills and Buddhist Mindfulness

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