Short residency DBA of PhD in Business

Discussion in 'General Distance Learning Discussions' started by JTNcarter, Nov 5, 2007.

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  1. Ted Heiks

    Ted Heiks Moderator and Distinguished Senior Member

  2. JTNcarter

    JTNcarter New Member

    This might be easier on the eyes although it just lists the program. No info.

    http://www.humancapitallab.org/learning.aspx

    I have a call today with someone in the business dept to find out more. I will update after the call. I have a MA at Bellevue and currently in their MBA program and love the school and the teachers. I would love to finish with them. And the things they are doing in the field of human capital management is really putting them on the map.
     
  3. JTNcarter

    JTNcarter New Member

    I’m back,

    They are looking at a start time around March of 2009. They will list the admissions requirements 1 year before that. They are still in the process of deciding how long of a residency the program will require, the amount of classes that will be needed, and the length and cost of the program. The first class will be highly selective and they are expecting around 12 students for the year. They have not decided on an admissions test but did say the standard is the GRE. Basically they confirmed they are in the process of developing the program and that’s about it.

    Personally, I think Bellevue is a great school and I am excited about this program. I am going to have to wait longer then I wanted but I will use the time wisely.
     
  4. Han

    Han New Member

    Did someone ring me? LOL!
     
  5. Ted Heiks

    Ted Heiks Moderator and Distinguished Senior Member

    Oh! The reason the other link was so hard on the eyes was because of having to scroll through 196 pages to find one short line about their proposed doctorate.
     
  6. Scott Henley

    Scott Henley New Member

    Agreed. Although this program would not be AACSB-accredited, it is likely that it will pursue this in due course. In Canada, the stringent provincial accreditation process makes third-party accreditation less important, but we do live in a global village where accreditations matter.
     

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