Of course you can also learn at Kellogg. The thing is, the stuff taught at Kellogg tend to be "softer". In my humble opinion, the soft skills can hardly be learned and practiced without a full-time immersion. (I actually think most of the soft skills can't be learned -- either you have it or not, but that's a different story. Opinions vary. I won't dispute.)
【在 z***g 的大作中提到】 : Why cant you learn something in Kellogg?
Agreed. And Booth's curriculum flexibility is second to none.
【在 n******h 的大作中提到】 : Of course you can also learn at Kellogg. The thing is, the stuff taught at : Kellogg tend to be "softer". In my humble opinion, the soft skills can : hardly be learned and practiced without a full-time immersion. (I actually : think most of the soft skills can't be learned -- either you have it or : not, but that's a different story. Opinions vary. I won't dispute.)
But Kellogg seems to have better career service for Part-time students: if you pay tuition out of your own pocket, which is what I am going to do, you can participate in on-campus recruiting with full-time's in your last year. With Chicago, from what I understand, you MAY participate in OCR even if you pay your tuition since you can't bid for interviews. Do I miss something here? :)
I agree with narazeth and nyuchicago . Again, you may want to ask yourself what your concentration would be. Booth is particularly strong in finance. As to the part time program, Kellogg just started two years ago and it is a more strict cohort program. The part time students have to attend same classes at the same pace for the first year. You can not skip any quarter in the first year,unless you want to wait for a whole year to join next year' s cohorts. Booth has way more flexible curriculum a
MBA is over-rated. Part-time program is even more so. Choose a program based on fit rather than ROI because the ROI is more likely correlated to individual rather than specific program.
【在 A******y 的大作中提到】 : Unlucky man ... Bad papers hurt you more later.
k*u
57 楼
if you want it so much to the point that you don't think about money anymore , then go for it. otherwise, you will have buyers remorse one way or another.
【在 k**u 的大作中提到】 : if you want it so much to the point that you don't think about money anymore : , then go for it. : otherwise, you will have buyers remorse one way or another.
I think chinese over emphasize hard skills. i often see chinese vent their anger on how their "weaker" indian colleagues got ahead in the work place. what the chinese didn't understand is that while the indians may have weaker hard skills, they are much stronger in soft skills. as for Booth, I think the school is beefing up the soft side. I see quite a few younger professors teaching some very interesting strategy/OB courses. more interesting is that the indian:chinese ratio in these classes a
【在 n******h 的大作中提到】 : Of course you can also learn at Kellogg. The thing is, the stuff taught at : Kellogg tend to be "softer". In my humble opinion, the soft skills can : hardly be learned and practiced without a full-time immersion. (I actually : think most of the soft skills can't be learned -- either you have it or : not, but that's a different story. Opinions vary. I won't dispute.)
On the contrary, I can't emphasize more on soft skills. I think, at the end of the day, what makes you successful is your soft skills rather than the hard ones. However, I think Chinese tend to place too much weight on classroom learning. I, for one, believe soft skills are best to be acquired from our daily work and life, if those can ever be learned and acquired. Get out of our office/home, play/social with people, take initiatives and risks, and charge ourselves responsibilies and leadership
【在 b***y 的大作中提到】 : I think chinese over emphasize hard skills. i often see chinese vent their : anger on how their "weaker" indian colleagues got ahead in the work place. : what the chinese didn't understand is that while the indians may have weaker : hard skills, they are much stronger in soft skills. : as for Booth, I think the school is beefing up the soft side. I see quite a : few younger professors teaching some very interesting strategy/OB courses. : more interesting is that the indian:chinese ratio in these classes a