Do you guys know of any besides the One-MBA program? Not worried about cost or prestige or even location at this point. Just curious.
Auburn University http://mba.business.auburn.edu/prospective-students/program-options/executive-mba/ University of Oregon http://www.oemba.org/ Cornell/Queen's College http://www.johnson.cornell.edu/academic/cqemba/ Georgetown-McDonough School of Business http://msb.georgetown.edu/prospective/graduate/iemba/ University of Georgia http://mba.terry.uga.edu/emba/ UPenn-Wharton School of Business http://www.wharton.upenn.edu/mbaexecutive/ Washington University of St. Louis-Olin Business School http://www.olin.wustl.edu/EXECUTIVEEDUCATION/EXECUTIVEMBA/Pages/default.aspx Vanderbilt University-Owen Graduate School of Management http://owen.vanderbilt.edu/vanderbilt/Programs/emba/index.cfm Sorry, I didn't catch the one weekend a month program. I apologize.
Southern Methodist University - EMBA - Dallas, TX The format is monthly, with alternating Friday, Saturday then next month it is Saturday, Sunday. What is important to understand is that the weekend is just the course instruction. You are going to have student work groups that meet as well. Mine met on Wednesday nights, twice a month to work the group projects.
Rice University - Jones Graduate School of Business (Houston) - MBA for Executives http://business.rice.edu/EMBA_WhyMBAExecutives.aspx Rice MBA for Professionals http://business.rice.edu/MBAP.aspx
My school Henley has an Executive MBA which is delivered in 3-4 day workshops once a month - http://www.henley.reading.ac.uk/management/mba/mgmt-executivemodularmba.aspx Other UK schools do something similar, Cranfield for sure. All the best, Dave C.
About ten years ago, I was interested in learning whether or not the one-session-a-month MBAs really and truly required applicants to have a Bachelor's degree. I located about forty at that time (no, I didn't keep the list), and wrote to the 20 most prestigious (my opinion), as if I were an applicant with a top job at a Fortune 100 corporation, but no Bachelor's degree. This, of course, wasn't the question asked here . . . but in any event, my recollection is that about half said that they had a policy of admitting a small number of applicants with no other degrees, most of the rest said they 'cioulkd probably work something out,' and only two, NYU and Brigham Young, said absolutely not.