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UID358677在线时间 小时注册时间2008-7-16最后登录1970-1-1主题帖子性别保密 
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| mogu> thanks for your support  
 So I saw that another CD
 poster got into Wharton and HBS, and there were a lot of comments about
 diversity at business schools. Here's my own thoughts.
 
 First
 of all, it tends to be that people from certain industries (consulting,
 banking, etc) value an MBA more and apply more for the MBA because it
 is important within their industry. So it is not surprising that many
 business school students come from these backgrounds.
 
 Second,
 naturally some companies are leaders within their industries, and so
 tend to attract the top talent in their industry- in the same stroke,
 then, since the top talent get into the top business schools, it is not
 surprising that many successful applicants come from these companies.
 
 Third,
 at the same time everyone is different. If you add up how many people
 worldwide work for the top 3 investment banks, PEs, VCs and consulting
 firms, you probably have something like 20,000 people- FAR more than
 the top 7 schools can take in (the famous "M7"). So even within these
 schools, the people I've seen as my classmates have tended to have very
 varied backgrounds. One guy took a break from his consulting job to be
 a 主播 in sports in India.. Another took some time to work for the
 government doing cross-border deals. And so on.
 
 Fourth, and this
 is something I frequently encounter, people typically ask about 'how
 many from China got in', and about GMAT and TOEFL scores. Unlike the 高考
 system, applicants for business school are simply not split up
 according to their origin nor according to their scores. At Wharton a
 rule of thumb is that if you have above 80% on both verbal and quant
 GMAT scores, then you're fine. Any better will not give you any
 advantage, though worse puts you at a disadvantage. Seen this way, 720
 (ie above the average score) is really the same as 800. Apart from the
 GMAT and TOEFL scores, another misconception is that Chinese applicants
 are competing primarily with Chinese applicants. This is simply wrong.
 There are so many other ways someone can be defined- one's occupation,
 age, number of years of working experience, number of languages spoken,
 gender, which schools you graduated from, which countries you have
 lived in, and so on- that merely simplifying the equation to a single
 factor- nationality- is inaccurate, misleading, and ultimately not
 productive.
 
 Lastly, this is not about diversity, but about the
 loan situation. I have every confidence that Wharton will have a
 non-cosigner loan in place for International Students by the time
 school starts. The key question (and this is something to ask about
 other schools that currently have this), however, is at what interest
 rate? Looking at how credit is scarce in the US right now, I'd be
 surprised if other schools were able to offer substantially lower rates
 than us, given we all have the same sources of credit (the banks).
 
 
 
 
 
 [此贴子已经被作者于2009-3-4 2:51:23编辑过] | 
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