可怜的橘子 - 2007-12-10 19:33:00
Special Report
1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö²Best Business Schools1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö²Kurt Badenhausen and Lesley Kump 08.18.05, 6:00 PM ET
1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö²1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö²Our fourth biennial ranking of business schools shows why students are embracing part-time programs. Our survey ranks schools based on return on investment--meaning compensation five years after graduation minus tuition and the forgone salary during school. The top part-time school, Stern's Langone Part-time M.B.A. Program, had a median five-year gain of $166,000, greatly helped by the absence of forgone salary. That sum beats the $134,000 gain of our top-ranked full-time program, Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College. In a combined ranking of part-time and full-time U.S. programs, Tuck and the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School are the only full-time schools that would make the top five. (For the first time, Harvard Business School is not the top-ranked school.)1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö² 1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö² 1½Oà#Êãbbs.eduglobal.comªº»åÃö²
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