<p>That wasn’t a smart decision man.</p>
<p>Great posting, but should really be headcount weighted to give more insight</p>
<p>Not that I’m willing to spend the time to go lookup the UG enrollment at all these schools, but would be nice if someone did :)</p>
<p>First, I believe you mean:
Michigan 49
Michigan State 15</p>
<p>Ohio State has 5 graduates go to one of the six prestigious b-schools. Arizona State, the largest university in the nation, is not even listed. Going to a public university other than Cal, UVa, and Michigan seem to handicap the applicant tremendously.</p>
<p>I renamed a few schools to their more conventional terminology and standardized the formatting. Boston - Boston College?</p>
<p>Harvard 192
UPenn 183</p>
<p>Stanford 117
Yale 113</p>
<p>Princeton 101
Duke 95
Columbia 89
UC-Berkeley 84
Dartmouth 80
Georgetown 79</p>
<p>Northwestern 67
Cornell 59
Indian Institute of Tech 58
Virginia 58
Brown 54
MIT 54
Michigan: 49
NYU 42
UCLA 41
Texas-Austin 40</p>
<p>West Point 29
USC 25
Boston College 24
Williams 24
BYU 23
Illinois 22</p>
<p>Washington 17
Michigan State 15
Carnegie Mellon 14
Notre Dame 13
National Univ. of Singapore 13
U of Chicago 12
Cambridge 12
Middlebury 11
LSE 11
Yonsei Univ. 10
Seoul National Univ. 10
Wisconsin 10
Georgia Tech 10
Vanderbilt 9
Oxford 9
Tufts 8
U of Western Ontario 8
McGill 7
Maryland 7
Fudan Univ. 6
Bowdoin 6
Johns Hopkins 6
Georgia 6
Wellesley 6
Amherst 6
Penn State 6
Purdue 6
Colby College 5
Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ. 5
Ohio State 5
Bates 4
New Economic School 4
Peking 4
UNC 4
Haverford 3
Rice 3
U of New South Wales 3</p>
<p>Can you do just the M7 (HBS, Stanford, Booth, Wharton, Kellogg, Columbia, Sloan)?</p>
<p>Up to Poets and Quants. They have Cornell Johnson but not Haas or Kellogg or Sloan. We are left with a list of six they arbitrarily chose.</p>
<p>Bump. I know you folks love analyzing data to death.</p>
<p>Internationally, Singapore does better on a per capita basis than any other country. It’s a city-state of only 5 million people. </p>
<p>We know India and China, on the other hand, contain more than 1 billion each.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Why 7 schools only when there are clearly 9 business schools that are consistently ranked top 9 by USNews in about the whole decade now??? Cornell-Johnson isn’t one of them, obviously.</p>
<p>The consistent top 9 are:</p>
<ol>
<li>Harvard</li>
<li>Stanford</li>
<li>Penn-Wharton</li>
<li>Northwestern-Kellogg</li>
<li>MIT-Soan</li>
<li>Chicago-Booth</li>
<li>UC Berkeley-Haas</li>
<li>Columbia</li>
<li>Dartmouth-Tuck</li>
</ol>
<p>Bumping…</p>
<p>bumping…</p>
<p>How about Claremont McKenna?</p>
Any updates?
@fReMoNtPeA When you say Washington, are you talking about Washington in Seattle or Washington University in St. Louis?
Lehigh University also does just fine. Traditionally in Top 10 for % of graduates who are CEO or Directors of public traded corporations. Billionaire List: Richard Hayne, Wendy Yuengling (via father Dick Yuengling), Roger Penske, Joe Perella, Barry Rosenstein, Herb Siegel. (6 in Total).