The school reports that the following are its five leading areas of study:
Economics
Finance
Marketing
Operations Management
Organizational Behavior
Average number of students in a core course: 75
Average number of students in an elective course: 30
Number of elective courses (not multiple sessions of same course) available in academic year: 54
Percentage of electives offered in 2002-2003 that are new in the past three years: 50%
New electives added in past 12 months:
Business Spanish
Shodh Yatra
Trade, Finance and Development: Global Impact on Business Decisions
Financial Reporting Analysis and Valuation
Securities Regulations
Stochastic Calculus in Finance
Retail Management
High Performance and Leadership Resilience
FULL-TIME PROGRAM FACULTY
Full-time faculty in residence over past 12 months
78
Adjunct or visiting faculty in residence over past 12 months
22
Tenured professors
70
Of those, what percentage are:
Female
7%
Underrepresented minorities: (1)
n/a
Members of company boards/ directors of boards of advisors
60%
Have owned a business
n/a
(1) Defined as U.S. citizens who are African American, Hispanic American, and Native American. Asian
Americans are not included in the minority percentage.
JOINT-DEGREE PROGRAMS
Joint-degree programs offered to full-time students:
n/a
OTHER B-SCHOOL DEGREE PROGRAMS
Other degree programs offered through the B-school:
Post Graduate Program in Agriculture Business Management
STUDENT LIFE
Editor's note: While the B-school may not have an active club in an area that interests you, the greater university system may.
B-school has active professional clubs in the following areas:
Consulting
Cultural Club
Entrepreneurship
Environmental
Finance
Information Technology
Marketing
Nonprofit
Operation Research Club
Sports Club
B-school has active networking clubs in the following areas:
Alumni Coordination
Spic Macay
Students Affair Council
Religious organizations active on campus:
n/a
Active intramural sports teams:
Basketball
Chess
Cricket
Football
Hockey
Lawn Tennis
Soccer
Table Tennis
Volleyball
Students plan group vacations that attract at least a third of the class? No
MBA Games, or sports contests against rival B-schools: