| |
| | Master of Business Administration - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | As the US MBA model emerged at the turn of the 20th century, Europeans developed such business schools as at the universities of London and Manchester; elsewhere colleges such as Cass Business School, London, IMD, Instituto de Empresa, INSEAD, Henley Management College, Cranfield School of Management, and Ashridge were established for management training. |
 | | Business schools or MBA programs may be accredited by external bodies which provide students and employers with an independent view of their quality, and indicate that the school's educational curriculum meets specific quality standards. |
 | | MBA programs expose students to a variety of subjects, including economics, organizational behavior, marketing, accounting, finance, strategy, operations management, international business, information technology management, supply chain management, and government policy. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/MBA (2185 words) |
|