آنیسه شاهمنش، ایرانی ناشناس در سطح اول فیلمهای عشقی جهان
The first graduate school of business in the United States was the Tuck School of Business, part of Dartmouth College Founded in 1900, it was the first organization conferring advanced degrees (masters) in the profitable sciences, precisely, a Master of Science in Commerce degree, the forebear of the modern MBA degree. In 1908, the Graduate School of Business Administration (GSBA) at Harvard University was recognized; it offered the world's first MBA program, with a faculty of 15 plus 33 regular students and 47 special students. The University of Chicago Booth School of Business first offered working professionals the Executive MBA (EMBA) program in 1943, first available in enduring campus in three regions (Chicago, London and Singapore) and this type of program is offered by most business schools today. In 1946, Thunderbird School of Global Management was the first school to offer an MBA program focused on global management. In 1950, the first MBA degrees awarded outside the United States were by the Richard Ivey School of Business at The University of Western Ontario in Canada, followed in 1951 with the degree awarded by the University of Pretoria in South Africa. In 1957, INSEAD became the first European business school to offer an MBA program. In 1986, the Roy E. Crummer Graduate School of Business at Rollins College (Florida) was the first MBA program to require every student to have a laptop computer in the classroom. Initially, professors wheeled a cart of laptops into the classroom. The MBA degree has been adopted by universities worldwide, and has been adopted and adapted by both developed and developing countries.
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