List of Big Ten business schools explained

All 14 universities in the Big Ten Conference operate business schools. Since 1992 they have organized an annual case study competition. On July 1, 2014, Rutgers University and the University of Maryland joined the Big Ten.[1]

School nameHost institutionDegree programs offeredYear founded
Kelley School of BusinessIndiana University BloomingtonBS, MBA, MSIS, MS, MSF, PhD1920
Eli Broad College of BusinessMichigan State UniversityBS, MBA, MSF, MSMR, MSSCM, MSBA, MAcc, PhD1956
Kellogg School of ManagementNorthwestern UniversityMBA, EMBA, PhD, MMM1908
Max M. Fisher College of BusinessOhio State UniversityBS, MBA, MLHR, MAcc, PhD1916
Smeal College of BusinessPennsylvania State UniversityBS, MBA, MAcc, PhD1953
Ross School of BusinessUniversity of MichiganBS, MBA, Executive MBA, MAcc,1924
Daniels School of BusinessPurdue UniversityBS, MBA, PhD1962
Gies College of BusinessUniversity of Illinois at Urbana–ChampaignBS, MBA, PhD1915
Tippie College of BusinessUniversity of IowaBS, MBA, PhD1915
Carlson School of ManagementUniversity of MinnesotaBSB, MBA, EMBA, PhD, JD/MBA, MD/MBA1919
Wisconsin School of BusinessUniversity of Wisconsin–MadisonBS, MBA, EMBA, PhD1900
Robert H. Smith School of BusinessUniversity of Maryland, College ParkBS, MBA, EMBA, PhD1921
Rutgers Business School – Newark and New BrunswickRutgers UniversityBS, MBA, EMBA, MQF, MFinA, PhD1929
Nebraska College of BusinessUniversity of Nebraska-LincolnBS, MBA, MPA, MS, PhD, JD/MBA, JD/MPA
1913

Notes and References

  1. Web site: University of Maryland and Rutgers University Become Official Members of Big Ten Conference Big Ten Conference Official Site . 2015-06-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160626233107/http://www.bigten.org/genrel/070114aaa.html . 2016-06-26 . dead.