密歇根大学安娜堡校区
The Stephen M. Ross School of Business at University of Michigan--Ann Arbor (Ross) offers these departments and concentrations: accounting, consulting, economics, entrepreneurship, finance, general management, health care administration, human resources management, international business, leadership, manufacturing and technology management, marketing, production/operations management, organizational behavior, portfolio management, public policy, real estate, supply chain management/logistics, quantitative analysis/statistics and operations research, and technology. Its tuition is full-time: $66,048 per year (in-state); full-time: $71,048 per year (out-of-state); part-time: $64,109 per year (in-state); part-time: $69,015 per year (out-of-state); executive: $168,500 total program (in-state); and executive: $173,500 total program (out-of-state). At graduation, 79.50 percent of graduates of the full-time program are employed.
The University of Michigan's Ross School of Business stresses action-based learning, a concept designed to teach students to ask pertinent questions, identify important problems and become effective leaders. Students can complete a full-time, part-time, global or executive MBA. Part-time degrees can be completed in the evenings or on weekends, and the EMBA courses meet only one weekend a month. There are also master's degree programs in accounting, management, entrepreneurship and supply chain management, as well as a Ph.D. program.
Students can get involved in a handful of centers and institutes at the business school, including the Frederick A. and Barbara M. Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise and the Tauber Institute for Global Operations. There are more than 70 student-run clubs and organizations, as well as a women’s initiative that offers support and programming for female students at the Ross School of Business. Students can find housing on and off campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Notable alumni of the Ross School of Business include Stacey Stewart, U.S. president of United Way Worldwide, and Roger Frock, former general manager of FedEx.