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Admission & Application Survey |
| Part-time MBA program |
The admissions process was relatively pain-free. There were no
strenuous, drawn-out interviews required. If the applicant wanted an
interview, the interview tended to be more informational, rather than a
test of the applicant's intelletual mettle and resolve in completing
the program.
There is an essay that needs to be written as part of your application.
But it is only 1 page long, unlike the instant autobiography that some
schools mandate. You write about how completing the MBA program will
help further your career aspirations - the standard Ms. America-type
question.
I wouldn't say that the admissions process was very selective. It
seemed to me that all my co-workers who applied to the school were
accepted, and these co-workers were not rocket scientists or even
janitors who sweep up the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. As
long as you score above average on your GMATs and have 2 or 3 good
letters of reference from your employers (past and present) or from
former teachers, you can always get into the program.
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