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in turn accredit mostly US schools。 Such international schools as are on
their books are usually very small; with strong US connections; such as
the American University in Blagoevgrad; Bulgaria; for example; which
offers a part…time executive MBA。
Three associations; however; dominate the field when it es to accrediting
the top…ranking business schools。 A score of the very top; mostly non…US;
business schools take the value of accreditation so seriously that they have
signed up to all three。 You might be forgiven for thinking that to be more
a sign of insecurity than a demonstration of value; remembering of course
that it is the students who pay for accreditation in every respect!
Appendix 301
The Association of MBA
AMBA (mbaworld); founded in 1967; has accredited 150 business
schools in 68 countries。 Its initial purpose was to help forge links
between the MBA alumni of the small but growing number of schools in the
UK; but subsequently it has branched out into the accreditation business。
Unusually for this type of activity; membership is open to any individual
who went to; or is studying or is enrolled to study; at an AMBA…accredited
business school。 It wants to be sure that schools offering an MBA: have
a clear strategy and mission; the faculty is large enough for the task; at
least 75 per cent of faculty have a masters or doctoral degree in a discipline
relevant to the subject for which they are responsible; and students must
have a minimum of 3 years’ work experience。
The Association to Advance Collegiate
Schools of Business
AACSB (aacsb。edu); founded in 1916 by; among others; Columbia
University; Dartmouth College; Harvard University; and Chicago;
Pennsylvania and Yale Universities; this the oldest and largest of the
three accrediting bodies。 It is; however; dominated by North American
institutions; with less than 10 per cent of its member institutions ing
from outside the United States and Canada。 But that may all be set to change。
AACSB; worried by petition from ranking provided by newspapers
and journals and concerned that these may be distorting schools’ behaviour
and misleading prospective MBA candidates; has invested in a business
school database of its own。 Since 2005; AACSB has published searchable
profiles of its 600 member business schools on its website and is the only
source of information about the whole business school and is the most
prehensive in terms of its coverage of the market。 Here you will find
details of schools such as HHL – Leipzig Graduate School of Management
(Germany); Toulouse Business School – Groupe ESC Toulouse (France)
and United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) (United Arab Emirates) that
may not show up in the rankings; but have high academic standards and
creditable results。
The European Quality Improvement System
EQUIS (efmd 》 Accreditation 》 Equis); formed in 1997; is the
newest and smallest of accrediting organizations。 It was set up by the
European Foundation of Management Development (EFMD) and accredits
113 institutions in 32 countries。 Though small in the accreditation world;
with over 15;000 management development professionals as members
302 Appendix
of the EFMD network and 650 organizations from academia; business;
public service and consultancy in more than 75 countries; its impact has
been significant。 EQUIS is not; however; primarily focused on the MBA。
Its scope covers all programmes offered by an institution; from the first
degree up to the PhD。 It has three important criteria: a business school
should show international standards of quality; have significant levels of
internationalization and integrate the needs of the business world into
its programmes。 EQUIS membership is almost the mirror image of that
of AACSB。 You won’t find Harvard; Wharton; Tuck or indeed many US
business schools of any calibre on its books。 But then you won’t find schools
such as Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile; Escuela de Administración;
Chile; the University of Auckland Business School; New Zealand; Ume。
School of Business; Ume。 University; Sweden or the Coppead Graduate
School of Business; Federal University of Rio de Janeiro; Brazil on AACSB’s
books。
RANKING THE SCHOOLS
Business school rankings have been around since the late 1980s; when a
couple of US general business publications realized that ‘best of’ lists were
a powerful tool for generating advertising copy from business schools
and upping circulation from potential students thirsty for knowledge。
Publications producing rankings have mushroomed; as have the
methodologies and data collection techniques employed。 Few business
schools believe that the ratings are of great help to students when making
their choice。 Nonetheless; most continue to participate; even to tailor their
activities towards improving their rank even at the expense of some aspects
of MBA content。 The logic is simple: rankings generate publicity。 If a school
is in and going up; it provides helpful PR; if it is out; or going down; it
will have to explain why to prospective students and to its alumni who are
naturally anxious not to see their investment devalued。 The Association to
Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (see above) is trying to encourage
the media to ‘rate’ rather than ‘rank’ programmes and to revise measures
to include research productivity while educating the public about the
limitations of rankings。 With newspaper circulations in terminal decline;
this seems a pious hope。
What’s being ranked
When you read the rankings you will see exactly what measures business
schools are being ranked on and how they are weighted to make up the
final result。 You need to consider if the measures are important to you。 For
example; ‘international mix of students’ features in many rankings; if you
Appendix 303
are an American student ing to a British business school you might
not see it as much of a benefit to find that less than 15 per cent of your
fellow students actually are British; as are an even smaller proportion of
your professors。 Increased earnings po