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[排名] 2017金融时报全球MBA排名 (Financial Times Global MBA Ranking 2017)

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楼主
发表于 2017-1-30 16:48:36 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
Rank
2017
Rank
2016
3 Yr
Avg.
School Name Country
1 1 2 Insead FR / SG
2 5 4 Stanford Graduate School of Business US
3 4 3 University of Pennsylvania: Wharton US
4 2 2 Harvard Business School US
5 10 9 University of Cambridge: Judge UK
6 3 4 London Business School UK
7 6 6 Columbia Business School US
8 12 11 IE Business School Spain
9 8 9 University of Chicago: Booth US
10 16 11 Iese Business School Spain
11 17 13 Ceibs China
12 11 12 Northwestern University: Kellogg US
13 9 10 MIT: Sloan US
13 7 10 University of California at Berkeley: Haas US
15 14 14 HKUST Business School China
15 18 17 Yale School of Management US
17 23 20 Esade Business School Spain
18 22 21 Dartmouth College: Tuck US
19 19 19 New York University: Stern US
20 15 17 HEC Paris France
21 13 18 IMD Switzerland
22 25 24 SDA Bocconi Italy
23 20 22 University of Michigan: Ross US
24 21 22 Duke University: Fuqua US
24 29 31 Nanyang Business School Singapore
26 32 30 National University of Singapore Business School Singapore
27 31 29 Cornell University: Johnson US
27 29 30 Indian School of Business India
29 24 26 Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad India
30 38 34 Alliance Manchester Business School UK
31 42 39 Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University Netherlands
32 34 30 UCLA: Anderson US
33 28 28 University of Oxford: Saïd UK
34 39 43 Shanghai Jiao Tong University: Antai China
35 27 31 University of Virginia: Darden US
36 26 31 CUHK Business School China
37 37 40 City University: Cass UK
38 33 36 Carnegie Mellon: Tepper US
39 44 37 University of Hong Kong China
40 44 42 Georgetown University: McDonough US
41 49 47 University of Washington: Foster US
42 35 42 Lancaster University Management School UK
43 41 41 University of North Carolina: Kenan-Flagler US
44 46 43 Warwick Business School UK
45 35 38 Imperial College Business School UK
46 47 44 University of Texas at Austin: McCombs US
47 54 54 Indiana University: Kelley US
48 52 53 University of Southern California: Marshall US
49 56 58 Macquarie Graduate School of Management Australia
49 62 64 Indian Institute of Management Bangalore India
51 55 55 Emory University: Goizueta US
52 51 51 University of Maryland: Smith US
53 57 52 Cranfield School of Management UK
54 49 53 Mannheim Business School Germany
54 69 61 Sungkyunkwan University GSB South Korea
54 66 65 AGSM at UNSW Business School Australia
57 Arizona State University: Carey US
58 65 59 Michigan State University: Broad US
59 60 62 University of St Gallen Switzerland
60 76 75 University of Notre Dame: Mendoza US
61 71 66 Georgia Institute of Technology: Scheller US
62 57 54 University of California at Irvine: Merage US
63 75 69 Ohio State University: Fisher US
64 53 53 Rice University: Jones US
65 80 Brigham Young University: Marriott US
65 60 59 University of Toronto: Rotman Canada
65 68 68 Wisconsin School of Business US
68 80 73 Washington University: Olin US
69 Purdue University: Krannert US
70 Rutgers Business School US
70 40 49 The Lisbon MBA Portugal
70 64 66 ESMT Berlin Germany
70 79 74 University College Dublin: Smurfit Ireland
74 84 Edhec Business School France
75 66 73 Durham University Business School UK
76 87 84 Melbourne Business School Australia
77 University of South Carolina: Moore US
77 86 83 University of Rochester: Simon US
79 71 70 Vanderbilt University: Owen US
80 63 74 University of Strathclyde Business School UK
80 69 80 Boston College: Carroll US
82 71 77 Boston University: Questrom US
83 91 82 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign US
84 94 80 University of Iowa: Tippie US
85 98 93 University of Pittsburgh: Katz US
86 78 85 George Washington University US
87 90 83 Babson College: Olin US
88 71 81 University of Minnesota: Carlson US
89 83 Incae Business School Costa Rica
89 89 88 Pennsylvania State University: Smeal US
91 98 University of Edinburgh Business School UK
92 94 Grenoble Ecole de Management France
93 University of Texas at Dallas: Jindal US
94 88 93 Western University: Ivey Canada
95 Indian Institute of Management Calcutta India
95 Temple University: Fox US
97 80 Ipade Business School Mexico
97 92 95 Birmingham Business School UK
99 Vlerick Business School Belgium
100 93 93 Queen's University: Smith Canada



Table Note

Although the headline ranking figures show changes in the data year to year, the pattern of clustering among the schools is equally significant. Some 170 points separate the top programme, Insead, from the school ranked number 100. The top 16 participants, down to Yale School of Management, form the top group of MBA providers. The second group, headed by Esade Business School, spans schools ranked 16 to 42. Differences between schools are relatively small within this group. The 40 Schools within the third group headed by University of North Carolina: Kenan-Flagler are similarly close together. The remaining 18 schools headed by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign make up the fourth group.

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沙发
 楼主| 发表于 2017-1-30 21:21:57 | 只看该作者

FT Global MBA ranking 2017: Methodology and key

This ranking features the world’s best 100 full-time MBA programmes. A total of 156 schools took part in the 2017 edition of this ranking. All participating schools meet the FT’s entry criteria, including being accredited by Equis or the AACSB.

We survey alumni three years after graduation so the programmes must be four years old. For schools to enter the ranking calculations, the FT requires that a minimum of 20 per cent of alumni reply to the survey, with at least 20 fully completed responses.

This ranking uses data collected from the schools and the 9,000 alumni who completed a full-time MBA at them in 2013 — a response rate of 41 per cent.

The ranking has 20 different criteria. Alumni responses inform eight criteria that together contribute 59 per cent of its weight. Eleven criteria are calculated from school data, accounting for 31 per cent of the final ranking. KPMG audits a number of schools every year. The remaining criterion, the research rank, counts for 10 per cent.

Alumni-informed criteria are based on the data collected in the past three years. Responses from the 2017 survey carry 50 per cent of total weight and those from 2016 and 2015, 25 per cent each. Excluding salary criteria, if only two years of data are available, the weighting is split 60:40 if data are from 2017 and 2016, or 70:30 if they are from 2017 and 2015. For salary figures, the weighting is 50:50 for two years’ data.

The first two alumni criteria are average income three years after graduation and salary increase compared with pre-MBA salary, both weighted at 20 per cent. For the latter, half of the weight applies to the absolute increase and half to the percentage rise (published). Salaries are converted to US dollars using October 2016 International Monetary Fund purchasing power parity rates.

The salaries of non-profit and public sector workers and full-time students are removed, as are the highest and lowest salaries from each school, to calculate a normalised average. Finally, salaries are weighted to reflect differences between different sectors.

“Value for money” for each school is calculated by dividing their average alumni salary three years after graduation by their MBA’s total cost, including tuition, opportunity cost and other expenses. Any financial help given to alumni is subtracted from the total.

The school criteria include the diversity of staff, board members, students by gender, nationality and the MBA’s international reach. For gender criteria, schools with a 50:50 composition score highest.

With the exception of the “PhD graduates” category, criteria based on school data use 2017 information only.

The research rank is based on the number of articles by full-time faculty in 50 internationally recognised academic and practitioner journals. The rank combines the number of publications from January 2014 to October 2016, with the number weighted relative to faculty size. The list of journals used for this criterion was updated and increased from 45 to 50, following a consultation with business schools in June 2016.

The FT Global MBA ranking is a relative listing. Schools are ranked against each other by calculating a Z-score for each criterion. The Z-score is a statistic that shows where a score lies in relation to the mean. These scores are then weighted as outlined in the ranking key and added together for a final score.

After removing the schools that did not meet the response rate threshold from the alumni survey, a first version is calculated using all remaining schools. The school at the bottom is removed and a second version is calculated and so on until we reach the top 100. The top 100 schools are ranked accordingly to produce the 2017 list.

Judith Pizer of Jeff Head Associates acted as the FT’s database consultant. The FT research rank was calculated using Scopus, an abstract and citation database of research literature.

Key to the rankings

Weights for ranking criteria are shown in brackets as a percentage of the overall ranking.

Salary today: average alumnus salary three years after graduation, US$ PPP equivalent. This figure is not used in the ranking.†

Weighted salary (20): average alumnus salary three years after graduation, US$ PPP equivalent, with adjustment for variations between sectors.†

Salary increase (20): average difference in alumni salary before the MBA to now. Half of this figure is calculated according to the absolute salary increase and half according to the percentage increase relative to pre-MBA salary — the “salary percentage increase” figure in the table.

Value for money (3): calculated using salary today, course length, fees and other costs, including lost income during the MBA.†

Career progress (3): calculated according to changes in the level of seniority and the size of company alumni work in now, compared with before their MBA.†

Aims achieved (3): the extent to which alumni fulfilled their stated goals or reasons for doing an MBA.†

Careers service (2): effectiveness of the school careers service in terms of career counselling, personal development, networking events, internship search and recruitment, as rated by their alumni.†

Employed at three months (2): percentage of the most recent graduating class who had found employment or accepted a job offer within three months of completing their studies. The figure in brackets is the percentage of the class for which the school was able to provide employment data and is used to calculate the school’s final score in this category. *

Alumni recommend (2): calculated according to selection by alumni of three schools from which they would recruit MBA graduates.†

Female faculty (2): percentage of female faculty. For the three gender-related criteria, schools with a 50:50 (male/female) composition receive the highest possible score.

Female students (2): percentage of female students on the full-time MBA.

Women on board (1): percentage of female members on the school’s advisory board.

International faculty (4): calculated according to the diversity of faculty by citizenship and the percentage whose nationality differs from their country of employment — the figure published in the table.

International students (4): calculated according to the diversity of current MBA students by citizenship and the percentage whose nationality differs from the country in which they study — the figure in the table.

International board (2): percentage of the board whose citizenship differs from the country in which the school is based.

International mobility (6): based on alumni citizenship and the countries where they worked before their MBA, on graduation and three years after.

International course experience (3): calculated on whether the most recent graduating class completed exchanges, research projects, study tours and company internships in countries other than where the school is based. *

Languages (1): number of extra languages required on graduation. *

Faculty with doctorates (5): percentage of full-time faculty with a doctoral degree.

PhD graduates (5): number of doctoral graduates from each business school during the past three years. The figure in brackets is the percentage of these graduates who took up faculty positions at a top 50 full-time MBA school.

FT research rank (10): calculated according to the number of articles published by current full-time faculty members in 50 selected academic and practitioner journals between January 2014 and October 2016. The FT50 rank combines the absolute number of publications with the number weighted relative to the faculty’s size.

† Includes data for the class of 2013 and one or two preceding classes where available

* Graduated between July 2015 and June 2016

板凳
 楼主| 发表于 2017-1-30 21:22:00 | 只看该作者
Mark一下!               
地板
发表于 2017-1-30 23:02:32 | 只看该作者
为什么没有复旦了啊?不可能跌出100了吧!
5#
 楼主| 发表于 2017-1-31 15:26:38 | 只看该作者
HarveyYin 发表于 2017-1-30 23:02
为什么没有复旦了啊?不可能跌出100了吧!

暂时不知道原因,有可能提交的调研数据样本不够神马的吧。假期过后我问问。
6#
发表于 2017-2-5 00:36:21 | 只看该作者
steven 发表于 2017-1-31 15:26
暂时不知道原因,有可能提交的调研数据样本不够神马的吧。假期过后我问问。 ...

请问有说法了么?~同想知道..
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