Top Business Schools
Since 1988, the Business School Ranking has made
the front cover of Business Week, and is probably the most eagerly
awaited and most widely talked about of all the rankings. The
edition comes out in October once every two years. The approach is
different from that of US News and World Report, as Business Week
sets out to measure client satisfaction (those fee paying students)
rather than using GMAT averages and selectivity criteria.
Business Week conducts two polls to measure
satisfaction.
The Graduate Ranking: Over 10,000 questionnaires
are sent out arbitrarily to current MBA students, and to avoid
excessive variance the results are factored: This years responses
are weighted for 50%, the previous year for 25% and the year before
that for 25%.
The Corporate Ranking: The newspaper interviews
around 350 companies that actively recruit on MBA campuses. The head
of recruitment is asked to rank the quality of the graduates and
schools are ranked from 1 to 20.
The raw scores of these two rankings are combined
to provide an overall ranking.
| Business Week |
Business Week |
Business Week |
| 1998 |
2000 |
1996 |
- Wharton
- Kellogg
- Chicago
- Michigan
- Harvard
- Columbia
- Duke (Fuqua)
- Cornell
- Stanford
- Dartmouth (Tuck)
- Virginia (Darden)
- UCLA(Anderson)
- NYU (Stern)
- Carnegie Mellon
- MIT (Sloan)
- Berkeley (Haas)
- Washington (Olin)
- Texas-Austin
- UNC-Chapel Hill
- Yale
|
- Wharton
- Kellogg
- Harvard
- MIT
- Duke (Fuqua)
- Michigan
- Columbia
- Cornell
- Virginia
- Chicago
- Stanford
- UCLA
- NYU (Stern)
- Carnegie Mellon
- UNC
- Dartmouth
- Texas - Austin
- Berkeley
- Yale
- Indiana
|
- Wharton
- Michigan
- Kellogg
- Harvard
- Virginia (Darden)
- Columbia
- Stanford
- Chicago
- MIT (Sloan)
- Dartmouth (Tuck)
- Duke (Fuqua)
- UCLA(Anderson)
- California at Berkeley (Haas)
- NYU (Stern)
- Indiana (Kelly)
- Washington (Olin)
- Carnegie Mellon
- Cornell (Johnson)
- UNC-Chapel Hill
- Texas
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