100 Years of Business Education How Management Education's Past Shapes its Present Management education has always striven to inculcate a culture that is both practical and responsive to society’s needs. Every tension the industry has experienced in its past continues to affect it today—and will reverberate into its future.
Why Tracking is More Productive, Less Fun New research from Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business in Durham, North Carolina, shows there are hidden costs in using gadgets to track how much we eat, sleep, and exercise.
The Value of Experience At a time when many companies value the outlooks of younger workers, baby boomers could find themselves marginalized in the workplace.
100 Years of Business Education View from the World: Business School Deans Reflect on the Evolution of Their Industry Administrators from nine schools offer their perspectives on a century of management education: how we got here, where we are now, where we’re going next.
Students 'Like' Adaptive Learning Maybe it’s not so terrible that students are constantly checking their “likes” on social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram.
How Scenarios Lead to Better Research Is there a better way to approach research in complex fields that study topics such as migration patterns, food insecurity, and climate change?
More Schools Accept the GRE According to a September 2015 survey by Kaplan Test Prep, 90 percent of 222 business schools in the U.S. and Great Britain allow applicants to submit scores from the GRE entrance exam instead of the GMAT.
Gender and Competition Many complex factors contribute to the pay gap between men and women business leaders.
Flagging the Next Stock Crash Researchers at the University of California Berkeley’s Haas School of Business have developed a new system designed to help investors actively avoid stock market price crashes.
Elite MBAs Pay Off A recent survey of 85 business schools in the U.S. and Canada concluded that individuals who earned MBA degrees from their full-time programs see, on average, a US$500,000 return on their investment over a ten-year period.
Business Schools Must Adapt to an Ever-Changing World The market for management training is no longer as certain as it was at the height of its 20th-century success—and business schools should plan their futures accordingly.
100 Years of Business Education Time Capsule: A Photo History of Business Education We asked business schools that were among AACSB’s first member institutions and other prominent organizations in the industry to dip into their archives and share moments from their histories with us.
100 Years of Business Education Growth & Progress: The Global Impact of Accreditation What led business schools outside the U.S. to become first in their markets to seek AACSB accreditation? Five deans describe their schools’ journeys before and after accreditation and share the goals they’ve set their sights on next.
100 Years of Business Education Starting Points How did AACSB’s founders envision their industry? What issues were the most controversial through the years? The conversations, concerns, and course corrections that contributed to the creation of AACSB’s accreditation standards.
100 Years of Business Education A Brief and Non-Academic History of Management Education Some of the people and events that have shaped business schools.
Megatrends and International Student Recruitment How to grow and diversify student enrollment at business schools.
AACSB 2017 Business School Data Guide This annual guide features b-school data such as program trends, faculty and student demographics, business school finances, characteristics of deans, and more.