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SurfDoctor is right, there are plenty of available MBA programs out there, but unless there are a bunch of hidden fees that I do not know about, OK State's $250 per credit hour AACSB accredited MBA is the best bang for bucks for a military member IMO. Even without the 18 hours of specific coursework available in electives, one could always get ...
Not that I'm retracting my opinion about Duke. They're a great school, and very prestigious, too. What I did wrong was that I spoon-fed you by telling you which is the best school. Instead, I've decided to pass on some info on DL MBA programs and let you, the reader(s) decide which is the best school for you.
Good school. I'm assuming the MBA program is good - but for whom is it the "best choice?" There are so many good choices -and so many different reasons. No one choice is the best for everyone. That's the kind of difference that keeps this forum in business. Marketing 101. Try not to make unsupported claims. Bad mojo.
The Ohio University online AACSB MBA program (while as the OP mentioned is MUCH more expensive than the West Texas program) does not require the GMAT AND does not require any bridge courses. This is not very common with AACSB MBA programs, so it might be of interest to some who may peruse this thread in the future.
HAU is the best deal on a legit RA Accredited MBA that I have ever seen. But, I don't think the program has any additional accreditation such as AACSB or IACBE etc. But, I don't think the program has any additional accreditation such as AACSB or IACBE etc.
I paid for my MBA at McGill University about 5K but the same degree from an executive program such as Toronto or Queens is at least 50K. Big difference and believe when employers really don't care much if your MBA came from a regular McGill program or executive Toronto program.
I am participating in the MBA program at CSU, previously intrigued by its LifePace model. However, CSU abandoned the old model this April. I feel sad about the new model with reduced flexibility, so I am considering withdrawing. May someone help me and suggest cost-effective MBA programs with similar flexibilities? It would be even better if ...
I don't think a Wharton MBA is the best example to compare to with it being Ivy League and not online. If you have the money you should be able to get into a program with a strong rep that can give you a good ROI, but if it's not an Ivy, or not a just-as-prestigious school like Stanford or Duke or a rung under that like a major state school with a D-1 football team, then you're not starting on ...
I would also like to factor in the general reputation of the MBA. Since the MBAs I listed above are not top tier MBA, its hard to know how good they are by looking at the different various ranking websites. For example, I am not sure how good/reputed the University of Nebraska, Lincoln MBA is. Is that a second tier, third tier, top 100 etc.
It is a 30 credit hour MBA, so your final bill will come out to be a little over $6,000 for an RA, AACSB accredited MBA. To top it off. While they have prerequisite undergraduate business courses (like all AACSB accredited programs do), you can test out of all of them.