If anyone has any insight, it would be appreciated, such as:
- specialism vs each other
- quality of modules
- quality of teaching case studies approach, eg more practical.
Thanks.
Paddy
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Posted Apr 08, 2010 15:57
without traveling to the universities, it's a pretty tough thing to do. You pretty much have to rely on the marketing materials from the schools as well as generalizations made by others :P
Here are some more of my thoughts/observations:
From what I gather, IESE models themselves after Harvard. Their university seems very traditional, and takes itself very seriously. They are part of the Universidad de Navarra, which is renowed for many subjects outside of business, as well. (There could be some advantages to being part of a larger network of colleges) It's a Catholic school.. The wiki article on the university is helpful: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Navarre
ESADE is similar in that it takes a traditional academic approach, and it's a catholic school. However, it is a stand alone business school that is not part of a larger university network. They seem to try to market themselves as being a school places importance on soft skills and leadership development. Their program is smaller than the other two.. I think there are only something like 200 people in each class, compared to around 500 at both IE and IESE. So, if you like more personal attention, this could be a good program for you.
IE is the youngest of the three schools, and it has no religious affiliation. They pride themselves on having instructors with recent practical business experience. They don't have any tenured professors. The really promote entrepreneurship and say that something like a quarter of their graduates go on to start their own businesses within 5 years after graduation. This seems to be the least like a traditional American MBA program.
So, while I tried to list the differences I could gather, at the same time, it seems these programs might be more similar than they are different. So, if you need to narrow down your list, maybe you should just do it by location or price, or some more easy to define criteria!
You might try attending online information sessions for each of the schools so you can ask your own questions. Or you could just e-mail/call an admissions representative.
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Article Sep 30, 2019
You cannot make a bad choice between these two Spanish business schools, but they offer different experiences