John A. Byrne, who first developed a ranking system for business schools while he was at Business Week, now has a major (and very interesting) website that also provides rankings; this year he has adopted something resembling Nate Silver’s statistical tweaking of multiple polls in order to form a more comprehensive view of MBA programs.
Bryne incorporates rankings from Bloomberg Business Week, Forbes, U.S. News, The Financial Times, and The Economist to obtain his results. One great thing about the Poets & Quants Best MBA Programs is that you can see the different rankings side by side along with Bryne’s results.
A special nod is due the University of Washington and the University of Minnesota: “Among the top 50 business schools, the big winners were Washington University’s Olin School in St. Louis, up 11 places to finish 29th from 41st last year, the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School and the University of Washington’s Foster School, both up seven places to rank 27th and 33rd, respectively.”
We also want to remind readers of something noted in our own rankings: some schools with a strong engineering focus–Texas A&M, Purdue, and Georgia Tech–also have outstanding business schools.
No big surprises among the leading programs nationwide, all of which are in private universities: Harvard, Stanford, Chicago, Penn, Northwestern, MIT, Columbia, and Dartmouth.
Below are the public university MBA programs ranked among the top 50, according to Poets & Quants:
9–UC Berkeley
12–Virginia
13–Michigan
17–UCLA
18–UT Austin
19–North Carolina
21–Indiana
26–Wisconsin
27–Minnesota
28–Ohio State
31–Maryland
32–Texas A&M
33–Washington
34–Penn State
39–Purdue
40–Georgia Tech
41–Michigan State
42–Iowa
43–Illinois
46–Arizona State
48–UC Irvine
49–Georgia