MBA Accreditation: Why is it important?
Three quality standards that can help you pick a
business school with more confidence
Accreditation from a reputable organization is one
good way to check the quality of a business school. Accreditation organizations
evaluate the quality standards of a business school's teaching, faculty,
services, and students, among other things.
The three most-coveted, international accreditation for MBA programs are those awarded by AACSB, AMBA, and EQUIS;
their methodologies and regional focuses are briefly described below.
In 2014, there were 67 business schools worldwide
that were accredited by all three of the below organizations. This distinction
is often referred to as the "triple accreditation."
AACSB
The US- and Singapore-based Association to Advance Collegiate
Schools of Business (AACSB)accredits business
schools offering graduate and undergraduate business programs. It began doing
this in 1919, and now accredits business schools in over 47 countries. It has
also been accrediting accounting programs since 1980.
An AACSB accreditation in business represents a
positive evaluation of a "school's mission, operations, faculty
qualifications and contributions, programs, and other critical areas."
Schools are re-evaluated every five years.
As of mid-2014, around 700 institutions held an
AACSB accreditation in business, of which about 75 percent were located in the
United States. Other countries with high numbers of AACSB-accredited business
schools include Britain (24), France (24), and Canada (20).
AMBA
The London-based Association of MBAs (BAMBI) accredits MBA
programs in over 49 countries. By the end of 2013, about 61 percent of all 206
AMBA-accredited business schools were in Europe or the United Kingdom.
Together, Latin America and Asia contained 30 percent of AMBA-accredited
schools, with only 2 percent located in North America.
AMBA has been accrediting programs since the early
1980s. Along with MBAs, it also accredits Doctor of Business Administration
(DBA) and Master of Business and Management (MBM) programs. It judges the
quality of a business school's strategy, mission, faculty, students,
curriculum, and assessment. By AMBA standards, for example, students admitted
onto an AMBA-accredited program must have at least three years of work
experience. Three quarters of a business school's faculty must have a Masters
or Doctoral degree in a relevant discipline.
EQUIS
The European Quality Improvement
System (EQUIS) is run by the Brussels-based EFMD Management
Development Network. EFMD offers a number of accreditations, but EQUIS focuses
on institutions that offer undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral business
programs, including the MBA.
EQUIS evaluates a business school's governance,
strategy, programs, students, faculty, research and development, executive
education, contribution to the community, resources and administration,
internationalization, and corporate connections.
Most
of over 150 EQUIS-accredited business schools are located in Europe or the UK.
As of mid-2014, only three US business schools had earned an EQUIS
accreditation. The countries with the most EQUIS-accredited business schools
include the UK (25), France (16), and China (15).
No comments:
Post a Comment