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Jun
03
2009

The Top Business Schools in the U.S.

The Top Business Schools in the US for Chinese Students
Best B-Schools in America

After two year of interviews and research we have compiled our lists of top business schools and Executive MBA (E-MBA) programs for Chinese students looking for study opportunities in America, Australia, Canada, UK, Singapore and New Zealand.

We will be listing the top five schools in each country in no particular order. The criteria used to evaluate schools differs greatly from that used by US News and World Report and others. We queried parents and prospective students during our travels about those issues that most concerned them and most affected their choices before and after admission. The rankings displayed are unbiased and were not affected by our affinity for any program despite one of the schools being a strong supporter of the Blog of Dreams.

Criteria:

  • Openness Toward Foreign Students/Ethnic Diversity
  • Financial Assistance
  • Post Graduation Placement Assistance
  • Faculty to Student Ratio
  • Overall Reputation of Graduate School
  • Campus Safety
  • Ease of Application/Admission Office Attitude
  • Affordability: Living Costs, Tuition
  • Curriculum
  • Student Life
  • Internship Options
  • Salary After Graduation
  • Alumni Network

Top Five Business Schools in no particular order for the second year in a row:

  • Purdue: Scored highest in Ethic diversity (Chinese students make up 2nd largest population), Alumni Network, Graduate School Reputation, and Curriculum. Downside: “Too many foreign students”
  • Ohio State: Scored highest in Student Life, Ease of Application and Financial Assistance. Downside:”Community off-campus lacks resources”

  • Cal Poly: Scored highest in Affordability, Campus Safety, Faculty to Student Ratio, Graduate School Reputation (Top Overall Masters Degree Granting Institution in the West) and Post Graduate Placement and salary (for state run schools). Downside: “Application procedure daunting and deadlines are not in line with desirable schools”

  • Harvard: Scored Highest in Reputation, Alumni Network, Salary After Graduation, Faculty to Student Ratio, Ethnic Diversity, and Internship Options. Downside: “Impersonal admissions personnel and application procedures”

  • University of Minnesota: Scored highest in Ethnic Diversity, Curriculum, Campus Safety, Ease of Application. Downside: “Off-campus life lacks diversity and weather is difficult for some”

Other schools close to making the cut: University of Arizona, Columbia University, UCLA, University of California at Berkeley, University of Pennsylvania and the University of Iowa…

Share Your Dream
Nov
03
2007

China E-MBA

The University of Maryland Smith School of Business Shanghai, China

Recently, during my trip in Shanghai, I had the opportunity to speak with Steven Feld, the Executive Director of Professional Programs and Services at the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business at the Maryland Center China in Shanghai. What I found was a man with a conviction to foster the growth of a business school in China that could live up to the growing needs for talented managers and can provide people who have already succeeded at doing business in China a chance to hone their skills to a new level.

EMBA in China

I have to admit that the interview’s beginning was little rocky. Because of a delay in my flight, I arrived at the Center, bags still in hand, about an hour and a half later than I’d planned. Fortunately, I was able to sneak into another interview and get a few shots at a question and answer. Dr. Feld was happily answering questions from a Chinese newspaper. I decided to go for the big one.

“So, how are you going to compete with Harvard? How about Duke? What have you got for the big guns?” I ask. Dr. Feld Steve Feld just grins. I know he’s been asked this question a dozen times before, and his response is fitting for a man who left Wharton to manage a program sitting on the fence between great and unbeatable.

“It’s all about service,” he said. “If you come to the University of Maryland’s EMBA program here, you get the same quality and the same teachers you’d get as if you were in the US. We don’t water down our program for China.”

And with that, I smiled, reached for my notebook, and realized I’d left it in the cab. Red-faced, I grabbed a sheet of paper from my bag and began writing furiously as Dr. Feld talked about this EMBA in China.

He also pointed out the way in which the program had been made administratively simple. “Our students have an average of 15 years of experience,” Dr. Feld pointed out, “and they are juggling families, running their companies, and completing 54 credit hours of school in 18 months. So we need to help them by making the administrative process of this course–buying books, registering for courses, receiving grades–as simple as possible.”

There were several key points that stood out as Dr. Feld talked. One was his sense of commitment: from everything he said, I could tell that the Smith School is not some kind of attempt to offer a mediocre program to a China hungry for, but an administratively simple program designed to produce the same quality of education that has given the University of Maryland its distinctive international reputation. A key point of the program is that the same professors who teach at the University of Maryland deliver the lectures and do the teaching just as they do in the US. Dr. Feld also stressed the three core competencies of the program: globalization, techonology, and innovation and entrepreneurship, which he believes will be core principles rising entrepreneurs and businesspeople need to master in the coming years of business.

Smith has some impressive ranking as well. Though it’s name is just beginning to come to China, it’s international reputation (ranked #17 in the world and #5 for its research department) is long-standing. One of the most interesting points of discussion I had with Dr. Feld was about the school’s impressive research rank. Can a school with a rank like that deliver good quality teaching, I wondered? Or would the faculty at the U of Maryland feel so much pressure to perform in research that they would neglect their teaching duties? Dr. Feld, as always, gave a delightful response. “Well, we have two ways to respond to that. First, we have research centers designed to disseminate the information from our researchers to the public and to interested parties. Second, we have a really smart dean who created a staff of teaching professors who aren’t obligated to do research. And what this has done is increase the standard of teaching at the University of Maryland, so that both the teaching staff and the research staff frequently get rated highly for their teaching.”

There is a saying China (isn’t there always?): “麻雀虽小, 五脏俱全.” Though the sparrow is small, it has all the vital organs. And though Maryland is by no means a small school in any sense of the word–its reputation and abilities place it among the best in the world–its name is only beginning to gain weight and force in China. Despite this, the programs the University of Maryland offers in China–its EMBA as well as its professional development courses–are designed with care and clever precision to deliver high-quality instruction to China’s business leaders.

A final update: interested readers can check out the Smith Business Intelligence site, a great source of useful information about the latest business information in China.

Share Your Dream
Aug
29
2007

A China MBA

China MBA: Cal Poly State University

MBA留学:Cal Poly

One of the dreams of many Chinese and International students is to study abroad. Part of the mission of the Dreamblogue is to help individuals realize their dreams through information and financial support when and where we can offer it. This is the first in a series of posts that will spotlight schools we believe to be the best in China, America, Canada, the UK and Australia for overseas learning.

Top boxers are always being sized up against others outside of their weight class and are referred to by sports pundits as, “pound-for-pound” the best puncher, or overall fighter in the game. The same metaphor can easily be applied to International MBA Programs and especially those with China as their primary focus.

Long before Cal Poly became partners with the Dreamblogue Dawei had a chance to interact with students and faculty from the Orfalea College of Business: the best pound-for-pound International MBA program based in America. Cal Poly State University in San Luis Obispo, California via The Orfalea College of Business offers a 1-year program for qualified students from China and the world: The MBA program with a focus on international business in China, concludes with a 1-month tour of Chinese culture and business. Prospective graduates visit small and medium-sized”expatraneurs” and China manufacturers, educational institutions, and world renowned multi-nationals like Walmart, Lenovo, and The Sands/Venetian. This year they climbed the Great Wall, toured the water village of Zhouzhung, and visited the UNESCO sites in the former Portuguese colony of Macau.

The Dreamblogue Team and Cal Poly at Zhongkai University below. Visit their CAL POLY MBA blog for more:

Cal Poly MBA

And the entire Cal Poly MBA program, located in one of the safest and most scenic areas of California, costs less in total than does a semester at a school with more recognizable branding. For now, Cal Poly is a well-kept secret, but that is not likely to last long as their leadership continues to innovate with a world-class faculty and curriculum.

You can download information in Chinese or English about Cal Poly’s programs here, as well as information about how to prepare and study for admission:

In addition to their MBA program the Orfalea College of Business also offers a Masters degree in Industrial Technology. This MS in IT program reflects the current realities in the global manufacturing sector. That is — rapidly changing partnerships and outsourcing relationships, a premium for those companies that can manage them well, and a need for entry level managers who can jump into the fray of value chain management. Integral to this environment and need is technical competence in the areas of packaging and logistics. All of these elements are key components in their MS in IT program. It is also the case that the environment of global outsourcing has created huge new opportunities for entrepreneurial ventures in technology areas. Since virtually everything can be outsourced, there are relatively fewer obstacles to building new technology ventures – or entrepreneurial ventures within larger companies. That said, a third important component of the MS in IT program is focused on technology entrepreneurship, a logical companion to value chain management and packaging.

Pound-for-pound we think these Cal Poly Orfalea College of Business graduate programs are the best in the world….

To speak to us about any of our sponsors or just to chat you must first allow pop-ups from Geesse.com where we host 24/7 Live Help. Please share your dreams with us…

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Blog your dream below:

Blog Your Dream
把梦想写在博客上
Name 姓名
Email Address 电子邮箱地址
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My Dream 我的梦想

Share Your Dream
Aug
02
2007

如果你想留学美国《本科学习》Study in USA Guide

Guide for Chinese Students 如果你想留学美国《本科学习》

 

Here you can download the guide to studying in the USA.The guides will help you to apply for training and visas relating to 《本科学习》是美国国务院编撰的四册一套引介从书种的第一册。这套丛书是向希望到美国学习的国际学生和学者提供客观和实际的。本书介绍如何选择和申请美国本科学位和职业学校教育机会的信息。

美国有三千六百多所学院和大学提供本科学位。这本小册子将告诉你如何准备成功的大学申请材料(第八章和第九章)以及签证的申请过程(第十一章)。一旦获得录取,你一定想知道抵达美国的时候应该期望些什么,我们给你提供了这方面的提示(第十二章)。这本小册子最后的术语汇编向你解释你在申请到美国留学时会经常碰到的一些词和用语。

本册的内容还包括美国的本科教育,学院大学、学位日历、系统、课程、社区学院、大学生活方式、费用住宿、环境、学校规模、入学要求、奖学金,转学,签证申请等等。

详细信息,可以下载以下资料。

Download Here:

Study in the USA

Share Your Dream
May
30
2007

Continuing Education for Expats

One thing I do miss about America is the grand amount of community and continuing education available to virtually anyone and much of it for free. I was stumbling through Illustratrator’s newest release on MAC yesterday and bemoaning the fact that even a book on the subject would be hard to come by or too expensive to ship or pick up in Hong Kong.

Coincidentally, two colleges contacted me about the possibility of low-residency Masters and Doctoral programs and Continuing Education. One school is based in the UK and one is in the US. Both have good reputations and a comprehensive offering of courses. Both asked me if I thought they could be successful in China with the expat community. I answered honestly that I hadn’t a clue, but that I would ask you.

Let me know your thoughts and please feel free to add a response or two to the poll.

{democracy:3}

Share Your Dream
May
12
2007

The China Dreamblogue

This is the China Dreamblogue, a home for the wandering adventures of Yanzhi and Dawei. For the next year, we will make our way across China and speak with people from every ethnic group and every province in China about their life, customs, and traditions. Our goal is to create an understanding of China in full and to create a life on the internet for China that matches the diversity and beauty of China’s people, customs, culture, and tradition. We will include photos, cartoons, maps, stories, recipes, interviews, and heartsongs on topics as varied as Chinese astrology, Chinese cooking, humor, and other inter-cultural issues.

As we travel, we also have other missions to complete. We will create blog posts about our journey, but we also want people from all over the world to participate in this blog by sending us photos, maps, information, captions, cartoons, comments, and anything else you want to add. In addition, you will have a chance to vote on where we go next.

A slogan we have at the Blog of Dreams is “One Dream, One Web.” This slogan reflects one of the goals of the Dreamblog: to create space for fair, open, and honest exchange about China. Too much of the Western world focuses on the negative about China. We want to support net neutrality–making space on the Internet for positive news about China.

We also want to use this blog to generate money…for charity. As this blog grows in internet power, it will generate more and more advertising revenue. We want to make sure this money goes towards people in China who need it most. We’ve created a system where we won’t touch the money–it will go directly to the people doing the work to make life in China a better place for deserving people who cannot afford items we take for granted—like books. We will include profiles of groups we give to, like Volunteer English Teachers, The Library Project, and The League of Extraordinary Chinese Women. We will also have a system where you can send money through our site to different charities that do work in China.

One of our goals is to create a dream list: we will ask people to submit their dreams and if ad revenues support it, we will grant their wish.

Finally, we want to create a better and stronger internet presence for China. We can do this and help you out with Link It Forward, a unique way we’ve created to build a stronger internet presence and network throughout China.

Join us on our journey to give China and its people an electronic introduction to the global internet community.

OUR #1 GOAL IS TO BE THE TOP RANKED SITE FOR LINKS AND FAVORITES IN TECHNORATI. HELP BY CLICKING THE FAVORITES LINK AND BY GETTING OTHERS TO DO THE SAME. ALSO LINK TO US AND JOIN OUR LINK IT FORWARD CAMPAIGN. THERE IS A BADGE ON THE SIDEBAR YOU MAY DOWNLOAD AND USE ON YOUR SITE!

WE NEED EDITORS, PHOTO REVIEWERS, TRANSLATORS, PR HELPERS, AND LINK MASTERS. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED LEAVE A COMMENT. IT WILL NOT BE PUBLISHED, BUT WE WILL CONTACT YOU!

Share Your Dream
Mar
09
2007

Link it Forward: Creating a Network for China

One of the many goals of the China Dreamblogue is to create a strong, pro-China internet presence in the blogosphere. To do this, we need your help. And as we create our pro-China network, we would also like to help the people who want to be part of this network by giving them a way to increase their SEO power and their ability to monetize their site. Sound complicated and difficult? The process is deceptively simple and powerful.

We’ve created an idea called link it forward. Similar to the internet memes and the Thinking Blog tag that recently moved through a number of English-language blogs about China, our idea will travel rapidly through pro-China blogs. In addition, this idea will help to create links–as many as four thousand–to your site through a trickle-down method.

There are five simple steps:

  1. Take this list of 8 blogs and put them in a post on your blog. The first three blogs, Onemanbandwidth, The China Dreamblogue, and Sinotrading, remain on the list.
  2. At the top of the moveable list, put a link to your blog.
  3. Remove the link from the bottom of blog.
  4. Send your updated list to at least five other people.
  5. If you want, create a new moveable list of five blogs you think deserve some links. Be kind and include the permanent list as well.

Perma-List:

The Moveable list:

The numbers work out well for you. You will have approximately five rounds on the list. On the first round, you’ll get five links. On the second, you’ll get 25 (each of the five people you sent the list to will get five more people to put your link on their site). The third round nets you 125, the fourth 525, and the fifth 2,625. Your grand total (should everyone follow Link it Forward) will be 3,305 links. And if you get linked to again by another blog, you can start the process all over again to earn another 3,000 links.

To monetize your blog or site please click on the links found on the front page of this blog.

 

 

China Dreamblogue的其中一个目标是在因特网上创建一个强大的,支持中国的互联网。实现这个目标,我们需要你的帮助。在我们建造我们中国的友好互联网的同时,我们将会帮助那些支持我们的人,把他们的博客推到网络排名的最前列。这个过程既简单又有效。

我们已经有一个构想,称为“链接在一起”(Link it Forward),与“网络媒母”(internet memes)相类似。“Link it Forward”( 链接在一起)会以很快的速度在支持中国的博客上移动。另外,这个构想可以使你的网站的链接数量增加几千个以上。

以下是六个简单的步骤:

  1. 按照以下的说明列两组博客的目录然后放到您的博客上。第一组名单是三个固定的博客:Onemanbandwidth, The China Dreamblogue, 和Sinotrading。这三个博客的连接必须永远的保留和不可改变。
  2. 在第二组上,把您自己的博客连接放在目录的第一位上。
  3. 把所有在第二组目录上的连接排名依次向下移动一位。即排第一的移到第二位,排第二的移到第三位等等(第五位的移到第一位)。
  4. 这就是说排第五的应该要完成一个循坏回到第五的位置上。
  5. 将你的更新了的列表发给至少5个其他博客。您发的越多,您就能获得更多的链接。如果您有一百个人,那就快点去做吧。
  6. 如果您想的话,还可以另外创建一个您认为有价值的列表。请也同样包括那个不变名单(即onemanbandwidth, china dreamblogue 和 sinotrading)

请记住,不要改动或者改变第一组名单和不要在第二组名单上加上第六个链接。同样,通过第一组名单所得到的广告收益将用作慈善用途。而从第二组“link it forward”上所得的收益将有您自己支配。我们会为您列举一些能够推算您自己网站价值的地方。

第一组(长期不变得目录):

Onemanbandwidth

The China Dreamblogue

Sinotrading

第二组(可更新的目录):

您的博客

您朋友的博客

如果理想的话,您大约会有比从前翻5倍的链接量。

第一个循环,您会得到5个链接。

第二个循环您会得到25个链接(跟您建立链接的那5个人每人会给您带来5个新的链接)

第三个循环您会有125个链接,第四个有625,第五个有3,125个。

如果每个人都按照Link it Forward的方法,您最后会得到3,905个链接。如果您同时又跟其他博客建立同种方法的链接,您将会得到另外3,000多个的链接。有了这上千个的 连接,您就能从Google Adwords(Google搜索引擎营销)那里得到相应的收益了。现在就请按本页底部的Google Adwords按钮来看一下您的网站的价值吧。

这是为了兴趣;这是为了提高中国博客在西方搜索引擎的排名;这更是为了中国的慈善事业出一分力(因为限定组中的3个博客将会把全部广告收益捐献给中国的慈善机构);同样也能增加中国博客在互联网上的知名度。

让我们一起link it forward(链接在一起)吧!

Share Your Dream