- UID
- 639843
- 在线时间
- 小时
- 注册时间
- 2011-6-13
- 最后登录
- 1970-1-1
- 主题
- 帖子
- 性别
- 保密
|
School | 2011 Median GMAT
| 2011 Average GMAT
| 2011 Acceptance Rate
| 2010 Median GMAT
| 2010Average GMAT
| 2010 Acceptance Rate
| Stanford | 740 | 730 | 7% | 730 | 728 | 6% | Harvard | 730 | NA | 12% | 730 | NA | 11% | Chicago (Booth) | 720 | 719 | 22% | 720 | 715 | 22% | UPenn (Wharton) | 720 | 720 | 19% | 720 | 718 | 17% | Dartmouth (Tuck) | 720 | 718 | 18% | 720 | 716 | 20% | Berkeley (Haas) | 720 | 715 | 12% | 710 | 718 | 12% | NYU (Stern) | 720 | 719 | 14% | 720 | 715 | 13% | Yale | 720 | 719 | 19% | 720 | 722 | 17% | MIT (Sloan) | 710 | 710 | 13% | 720 | 718 | 13% | Columbia | 710* | 716 | 16% | 710* | 712 | 15% | Kellogg | 710 | 714 | 20% | 720 | 715 | 19% | Michigan (Ross) | 710 | 703 | 32% | 710 | 704 | 25% | Virginia (Darden) | 710 | 701 | 25% | 700 | 699 | 26% | UCLA (Anderson) | 710 | 704 | 29% | 710 | 710 | 29% | Duke (Fuqua) | 700 | 698 | 26% | 700 | 697 | 24% | Cornell (Johnson) | 700 | 687 | 27% | 700 | 687 | 23% | Texas (McCombs) | 700 | 692 | 25% | 690 | 684 | 24% | Carnegie-Mellon | 690 | 686 | 24% | 700 | 694 | 27% | UNC (Kenan-Flagler) | 690 | 698 | 38% | 700 | 686 | 36% | Emory (Goizueta) | 690 | 681 | 35% | 680 | 680 | 33% | Georgetown | 690 | 686 | 49% | 685 | 684 | 42% | Wisconsin | 690 | 680 | 30% | 670 | 675 | 31% | Indiana (Kelley) | 680 | 670 | 38% | 660 | 664 | 42% | USC (Marshall) | 680 | 670 | 38% | 690 | 690 | 22% | Vanderbilt (Owen) | 700 | 695 | 29% | 670 | 673 | 36% |
GMAT Scores Slip At Many Top Schoolsby John A. Byrne Some 15 of the top 25 U.S. business schools accepted more applicants this year than last and nearly a quarter of the top 25 schools reported declines in median GMAT scores, according to a new analysis by Poets&Quants. Both trends are largely a consequence of the previously reported fall in applications at many business schools. While there were schools that clearly bucked the trend, some of the nation’s most prestigious business schools saw declines in the GMAT scores for the latest crop of entering MBAs. Schools reporting ten-point drops in their median GMAT scores were MIT Sloan, Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Managment, Carnegie-Mellon’s Tepper School, North Carolina’s Kenan-Flagler Business School, and the University of Southern California’s Marshall School. THE MEDIAN GMAT AT STANFORD JUMPED TEN POINTS TO 740 THIS YEAR Stanford Graduate School of Business was one of eight schools reporting a rise in median GMAT scores for its entering class. Stanford’s median jumped ten points to 740 from 730, ten points higher than Harvard Business School, the school reporting the next highest median GMAT score. Two business schools reported 20-point increases in their median GMATs this year: Indiana’s Kelley School of Business and the B-school at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Wisconsin rose to 690 from 670, while Kelley rose to 680 from 660. Perhaps the single biggest surprise was the 30-point rise in median GMAT at Vanderbilt University’s Owen School of Business. How did the school manage to increase the median GMAT score of its latest class by a full 30 points to 700 from 670 last year? “Vanderbilt University as a whole has invested heavily in terms of financial resources into the Owen school,” he said. “That has led to a significant increase in the amount of scholarships we can offer applicants. Over 70% of students are on some scholarship. That is a huge increase from previous years.”
Source: Business schools reporting to Bloomberg BusinessWeek. |
|