So here's an interesting thing, which first I heard from a friend who attended one of those Ashridge "MBA in a Day" events.
Ashridge is reorganising the taught element of its MBA into four thematic semester-long blocks which can be taken in any order. Full time students will take two blocks per semester, and part-time students will take one. The two groups will be partly taught together, allowing substantial interaction between the highly-international full-time group and the very Europe part-time cohort. Students will be able to join in any semester, move between the modes and take semesters off.
There are other MBA programmes with integrated four module core curriculums (e.g. University of Melbourne - http://www.mbs.edu/go/degree-programs/mba-and-general-management-programs/emba/subjects, and the University of Wisconsin http://www.wisconsinonlinemba.org/mba/modules.php) but I cannot think of any where the full and part-time students are regularly (even if partly) taught together.
What do people think of it?
Ashridge is reorganising the taught element of its MBA into four thematic semester-long blocks which can be taken in any order. Full time students will take two blocks per semester, and part-time students will take one. The two groups will be partly taught together, allowing substantial interaction between the highly-international full-time group and the very Europe part-time cohort. Students will be able to join in any semester, move between the modes and take semesters off.
There are other MBA programmes with integrated four module core curriculums (e.g. University of Melbourne - http://www.mbs.edu/go/degree-programs/mba-and-general-management-programs/emba/subjects, and the University of Wisconsin http://www.wisconsinonlinemba.org/mba/modules.php) but I cannot think of any where the full and part-time students are regularly (even if partly) taught together.
What do people think of it?