MBAs Guide
Broaden your horizons with international study
Venturing overseas to get a degree makes you attractive to employers – and it's fun
Inside MBAs Guide
Critics believe that MBA programmes need reform – but alumni don't agree
Thursday, 3 December 2009
Self-criticism and the MBA may seem unlikely bedfellows. The degree, after all, has long been associated with training masters of the universe. But chastened by charges that this training was responsible for the economic crisis, the Association of MBAs (AMBA) and Durham Business School have this week published a report on how alumni and business schools see the curriculum and what improvements may be necessary.
Cheer up, it still pays to go to business school
Thursday, 12 November 2009
Forget the economic gloom, there's proof that an MBA can boost your earnings – even in bad times
Amba Student Of The Year Award: Students from Africa, South America and the USA are nominated this year
Thursday, 1 October 2009
Together the finalists for the Student of the Year award, run jointly by The Independent and the Association of MBAs (Amba), illustrate the internationalism of today's scholars. Although they are pursuing very different careers, have very different life stories and hold varied ambitions, their reasons for studying are very similar – they all see the MBA qualification as the means to gain the skills and confidence to take them in new directions and advance their careers.
Can the MBA boom last?
Thursday, 1 October 2009
Despite the recession, the numbers taking MBA courses are increasing – but some think the peak could have been reached.
Blowin' in the wind: How business schools are discovering climate change
Thursday, 1 October 2009
Climate change is on everyone's lips right now and business schools are no exception. It's no surprise that an issue with such sweeping ramifications for the economy is turning up in MBA courses, but the way in which the schools are approaching the issue varies widely, from treating it as just another problem confronting managers, through lumping it in with corporate and social responsibility, to regarding it as so important that it requires a degree of its own.
Why aren't students learning Chinese?
Thursday, 1 October 2009
This month, a group of prospective students are due to arrive at a test centre in San Diego, California, where they will have their palms scanned and IDs checked. They will take a cubicle seat in front of a computer, monitored by CCTV cameras, with earphones on, for a test that might change their lives. These guinea pigs will be taking the first paid-for Pearson Test of English (PTE), which examines a candidate's reading, writing, listening and speaking ability, entirely by computer.
Stefano Harney: 'For most people, the crisis has only just begun'
Thursday, 1 October 2009
What should an MBA look like after the crisis? The very question resonates with everything that is wrong with the qualification – indeed everything that is wrong with business education in general. Because only from the very particular position of "business leadership" could someone even remotely begin to talk about life after the economic crisis. And it's this very particular position of leadership that business students are being invited to inhabit, especially in the MBA.
Turn on your iPod and learn
Thursday, 1 October 2009
Anywhere can be a classroom when you download the lessons to a media player.
Sign on the dotted line: Students are promising to act honestly by pledging themselves to a new oath
Thursday, 1 October 2009
In the past, MBA graduates went out into the world vowing to do whatever was necessary to claw their way to the top. Now they are pledging to work for "sustainable prosperity" and promising never to put their own ambitions ahead of those of their companies.
A shock to the system: Can you learn the principles of business management in only 80 minutes?
Thursday, 1 October 2009
It's slick, short, funny and focused. And, at just £10.99, it's more than 4,000 times cheaper than an MBA from a top UK business school. But does The 80 Minute MBA deliver? This pop paperback, which has shot to the top of the business book lists and been snapped up by people worldwide, aims to give its readers an MBA overview in less time than it takes to travel by train from London to Manchester. But how well does it succeed?
STUDENT EDITOR'S CHOICE
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1 Mechanical, aeronautical and manufacturing engineering
3 The students taking a passage to India
4 History
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6 High flyer: How to become a pilot
7 The student guide to saving cash
8 Culture of success: European schools introduce arts subjects to management curriculum
9 Time to get switched on to sustainability
10 It's not easy to become a hedge fund manager - you need passion and instinct
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