This list of Ivy League business schools outlines the six universities of the Ivy League that host a business school. The creation of business schools at Ivy League universities occurred over a period of nearly a century, beginning with the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, founded in 1881 by Joseph Wharton, which was the first collegiate (undergraduate) business school in the world.[1] In 1900, the Tuck School at Dartmouth was founded as the world's first graduate school of business; and in 1921, Harvard Business School became the first business school to offer the MBA degree.
Ivy League business schools
editSchool name | Host institution | Location | Image | Degree programs offered | Year founded |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Columbia Business School | Columbia University | New York City, New York | MPhil, MS, MBA, EMBA, PhD | 1916 | |
Harvard Business School | Harvard University | Allston, Massachusetts | MBA, PhD, DBA | 1908 | |
Johnson School (grad) Dyson School (undergrad) |
Cornell University | Ithaca, New York | BS, MS, MPS, MBA, EMBA, PhD | 1909 | |
Tuck School of Business | Dartmouth College | Hanover, New Hampshire | MBA | 1900 | |
Wharton School | University of Pennsylvania | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | BS Econ, MBA, EMBA, PhD | 1881 | |
Yale School of Management | Yale University | New Haven, Connecticut | MBA, EMBA, PhD | 1976 |
Related programs at Ivy League Schools
edit- Cornell's School of Hotel Administration offers BS, MMH, MS, and PhD degrees; and its School of Industrial and Labor Relations offers BS, MILR, EMHRM, and PhD degrees.
- Brown offers a Business Economics track within its Commerce, Organizations and Entrepreneurship undergraduate concentration.[2] It also jointly offers an EMBA with Spain's Instituto de Empresa Business School.[3]
- Princeton is home to the Bendheim Center for Finance, which specializes in quantitative finance and offers an undergraduate finance certificate and the Master in Finance degree.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Wharton official Web site Archived 2005-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Business Economic Track". Brown University. Retrieved 2008-01-18.
- ^ "Brown University and IE Business School to Launch a Joint EMBA". MBA Today. Retrieved 2014-05-28.