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The Ecole Suprieure de Commerce of Paris (now ESCP Europe) is the oldest business school in the world
Warrington College of Business at the University of Florida A business school is a university-level institution that confers degrees in Business Administration. They can also be known by such names as College of Business, College of Business Administration, School of Business, or School of Business Administration. A business school teaches topics such as accounting, administration, economics, entrepreneurship, finance, information systems, marketing, organizational behavior, public relations, strategy, human resource management, and quantitative methods.
Contents
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1 Types 2 Notable firsts 3 Degrees 4 Use of case studies o 4.1 History of business cases 5 Other approaches 6 Global Master of Business Administration ranking 7 Lists 8 See also 9 References 10 External links
[edit] Types
They include schools of business, business administration, and management. There are four principal forms of business school. 1. Most of the university business schools are faculties, colleges or departments within the university, and teach predominantly business courses. 2. In North America a business school is often understood to be a university graduate school which offers a Master of Business Administration or equivalent degree. 3. Also in North America the term "business school" can refer to a different type of institution: a two-year school that grants the Associate's degree in various business subjects. Most of these schools began as secretarial schools, then expanded into accounting or bookkeeping and similar subjects. They are typically operated as businesses, rather than as institutions of higher learning. 4. In Europe and Asia, some universities teach only business.
1759 The Aula do Comrcio in Lisbon was the world's first institution to specialise in the teaching of commerce. It provided a model for development of similar governmentsponsored schools across Europe, and closed in 1844, when it merged with Instituto Industrial de Lisboa to become Instituto Industrial e Comercial de Lisboa.[citation needed] After the division of that organization, and several changes of names, it became the Instituto Superior de Economia e Gesto of the Technical University of Lisbon 1819 The Ecole Suprieure de Commerce of Paris (now ESCP Europe) was founded. It is the oldest business school in the world.[1] 1857 The Budapest Business School was founded. It is the oldest business school in Central Europe and the second oldest one in the world.[citation needed] 1881 The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania is the world's first collegiate business school.[citation needed] 1898 Handelshochschule Leipzig (aka Leipzig Graduate School of Management), the first business school in Germany, was founded.[citation needed] 1898 The University of St. Gallen established, the first university in Switzerland teaching business and economics.[citation needed] 1898 The University of Chicago Booth School of Business (then the Graduate School of Business or Chicago GSB) was the first business school to offer a PhD program and an Executive MBA program. It is the first business school to have a Nobel laureate on its faculty: George Stigler won the prize after retiring from the school in 1981. It is also the first business school to have six Nobel laureates on its faculty.[citation needed]
1898 The College of Commerce at the University of California, Berkeley, later renamed the Haas School of Business, was founded as the first business school at a public university.[citation needed] 1889 The predecessor of Manchester Metropolitan University Business School was founded as the first school teaching commerce in the United Kingdom.[citation needed] 1900 The Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College was founded as the first graduate school of business in the US, offering the first master's degree in business administration, titled the "Master of Commercial Science".[citation needed] 1902 The Birmingham Business School was set up as the then University of Birmingham's School of Commerce, the first Business School in the UK.[citation needed] 1906 The Warsaw School of Economics (SGH) was established as the first school of commerce in Poland.[citation needed] 1907 The cole des Hautes tudes Commerciales de Montral, now HEC Montreal, was founded as the first business school in Canada.[citation needed] 1909 Stockholm School of Economics or Handelshgskolan i Stockholm was founded as the first institution dedicated to business and economics in Sweden.[citation needed] 1910 Harvard Business School was the first business school to offer a degree called the "MBA".[citation needed] 1911 Helsinki School of Economics or Helsingin kauppakorkeakoulu was founded as the first Finnish-language institution dedicated to business and economics in Finland.[citation needed] 1918 University of Edinburgh set up the first faculty for the study of business and commerce in Scotland.[citation needed] 1921 Nanjing University (then named National Southeastern University and later renamed National Central University and Nanjing University) moved the Faculty of Business originated in 1917 from Nanjing to Shanghai to establish the university business school, which was the first professional Chinese university business school. Later the school became Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, and Nanjing University Business School was refounded, as well as the School of Management at NCU in Taiwan.[citation needed] 1931 MIT Sloan School of Management The worlds first university-based executive education program the MIT Sloan Fellows was created in under the sponsorship of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., an 1895 MIT graduate who was then chairman of General Motors.[citation needed] 1936 The Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration (NHH) was established as Norway's first business school.[citation needed] 1941 ESAN - Escuela Superior de Administracion de Negocios, the first business school in Latin America and Peru, was founded by Stanford.[citation needed] 1946 The Thunderbird School of Global Management, then called the American Institute for Foreign Trade, was the first graduate management school focused exclusively on global business.[2][3] 1948 The University of Western Ontario was the first university outside the United States to offer an MBA.[citation needed] 1949 The University of Pretoria in South Africa founded the oldest business school in Africa and was the first university to offer an MBA outside of North America.[4] In
January 2008 the Graduate School of Management was formally replaced by the Gordon Institute of Business Science.[5] 1949 The E. Claiborne Robins School of Business was founded as the first business school within a liberal arts university.[citation needed] 1953 The first Latin American school of business, Adolfo Ibez (see Adolfo Ibez University), is created in Valparaso, Chile.[citation needed] 1955 IBA was established by the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. The Wharton School provided professors and assistance, to what would become the finest and most prestigious business school in Pakistan.[citation needed] 1957 INSEAD, near Paris, France, became the first European institution to offer an MBA program.[citation needed] 1958 Fundao Getlio Vargas was the first business school founded in Latin America to offer an MBA-type qualification.[citation needed] 1964 - IESE launched the first two-year MBA program in Europe under the guidance of the Harvard Business School.[citation needed] 1964 National Chengchi University offered the first Chinese MBA program.[citation needed] 1964 INCAE Business School or Instituto Centroamericano de Administracin de Empresas was founded by Harvard Business School.[citation needed] 1966 The National Institute of Development Administration or NIDA was the first graduate school that offer an MBA program in Thailand.[citation needed] 1973 The cole des Affaires de Paris (EAP) (now ESCP-EAP) was the first business school with campuses in three countries.[citation needed] 1991 The IEDC-Bled School of Management was the first business school to offer an MBA program in Eastern Europe.[citation needed] 1992 The Thunderbird School of Global Management was the first business school to have campuses on three continents.[citation needed] 1994 CEIBS (China Europe International Business School) was the first business school in China to have received funding from a foreign government, namely the European Commission.[6] 1999 Kyiv Mohyla Business School was the first business school to offer an MBA program in Ukraine.[citation needed] 2001 - IESE launched the world's first intercontinental, modular Global Executive MBA program.[citation needed] 2001 The Asian Institute of Management was the first graduate school of management in the world to receive ISO 14001 Certification.[citation needed] 2010 Skema Business School, opting for a multi campus strategy all around the world, in Brazil, France, China, Russia, Australia, Morocco and the USA, is the first French Business School to open a campus in the United States in Raleigh, North Carolina among the Research Triangle Park.[7][8]
[edit] Degrees
Associate's degree: AA, AAB, ABA, AS Bachelor's Degrees: BA, BS, BBA, BBus, BComm, BSBA, BAcc, BABA, BBS, BMOS and BBusSc
Master's Degrees: MBA, MBM, MM, MAcc, MMR, MSMR, MPA, MISM, MSM, MHA, MSF, MSc, MST, MMS, EMBA and MComm. At Oxford and Cambridge business schools an MPhil, or Master of Philosophy, is awarded in place of an MA or MSc. Post Graduate: Post Graduate Diploma in Management (PGDM), Post Graduate Diploma in Business Management (PGDBM), Post Graduate Program (PGP) in Business Management, Post Graduate Program (PGP) in Management Doctoral Degrees: Ph.D., DBA, DHA, DM, Doctor of Commerce (DCOM), FPM, PhD in Management or Business Doctorate (Doctor of Philosophy), Doctor of Professional Studies (DPS)
talents of the teacher. Consequently most professors are capable of supervising application of this method.