Dear Tony,
Thank you for your message and interest.
1. MBA degree and certificates:
I have received the "MBA degree certificate" from my home university (CUHK) and I have also received the "OneMBA Certificate", issued by the five partner schools and signed by all five deans of the respective partner schools.
2. Class size:
For lack of an exact statistic, I have posted group pictures of all cohorts 2004-2013 here:
http://www.find-mba.com/about/Stephan/photosI have previously posted the specific numbers of my own class of 2010 at CUHK in the following post:
http://www.find-mba.com/board/26030/post-26032If you are looking for an official graduation statistic, may I suggest that you approach the nearest OneMBA program office. see
http://onemba.org/index.php/contact-information/For the following inoffical analysis I'm looking at the limited information about the cohorts that is available to me as an alumni. To the best of my knowledge that information is a snapshot taken at the time of the 1st residency (typically Washington DC in September), I'd expect that there were a few drop-outs along the 21 months journey to graduation.
I found that the average class size for the cohorts 2008-2013 was approx. 100 students. Usually RSM and UNC each contributed about 1/3 of the cohort, and the remaining 1/3 was about equally split between CUHK, FGV, EGADE.
The classes of 2011 and 2012 that begun their study in 2009 and 2010 respectively were a bit smaller than the average (with the exception of FGV). I would argue that this was due to the ongoing world-wide economic crisis since late 2008. I think that during these times students and companies were less likely to commit to the significant investment into an Executive MBA education (note that the target group is different from the full-time or part-time MBAs).
For the past 3 intakes there has been a trend of increasing student numbers at CUHK, EGADE and FGV, while RSM and UNC remained stable. I think this is a reflection of the shifting economical center of gravity from developed regions (e.g. North-America, Europe) to "emerged" markets (e.g. China, Brazil, Mexico amongst others). I believe that the number of students at CUHK, FGV and EGADE will continue to increase for the current intake (class of 2014), while the number of students at RSM, UNC will remain stable.
My understanding is that the OneMBA program ExCo plans to increase the total class size to approx. 125 students for the current and subsequent intakes - without compromising on the quality of students or the quality of the study experience. I don't think that they want to increase the class size beyond 125 in the foreseeable future.
If you are considering to enroll into the OneMBA program and wish to talk to OneMBA alumni about their experience, I will gladly get you in touch with alumni in your region.
With warm regards,
-Stephan
CUHK OneMBA Alumni 2010