Showing posts with label harvard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harvard. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 October 2018

19 Difference Between Yale And Harvard University

1. At Yale the view is, you got in here, grades and ranking don't matter. At Harvard the view is, you got in here, sink or swim and you damn well better get good grades. 2. Harvard University Ranked 2nd worldwide in 2015/16 Yale University Ranked 15th worldwide in 2015/16 3. Harvard University is a Significantly Larger School. 4. Harvard University is Slightly More Difficult to Get In: (5.6% vs. 6.7% Acceptance Rate) 5. Harvard edges out Yale on prestige. 6. More douchebag lawyers and bankers working in PE, hedge funds, investment banks, law firms, and consulting shops came out of Harvard than Yale. 7. More activists, politicians, judges, and artists came from Yale. 8. One is that Yale College is particularly strong in music, with a lot of interest in that. Harvard is strong in that regard, too, but it's a real part of Yale's culture in a pretty unique way. 9. Harvard University Around 21,000 students – 6,700 undergraduates, 14,500 postgraduates Yale University About 12,300 students – 5,450 undergraduates and 6,860 postgraduates


Saturday, 17 June 2017

4 Difference Between Harvard University And Harvard College

1. Harvard College is the “original” Harvard, founded in 1636 as the oldest institution of higher education in the United States.
2. Harvard University refers to the full set of graduate schools along with the undergraduate institution (Harvard College).
3. .Harvard College first trained the clergy of several churches. And as it became more secular and offered higher degrees to students, its name was changed to Harvard University.
4. Harvard College only refers to Harvard's College of Arts and Science, where students receive undergraduate degrees such as bachelor’s degree. However, Harvard University includes the Harvard College and all the other graduate schools including Harvard Business School, Harvard Medical School, etc. and the various research centers.


Wednesday, 7 June 2017

14 Difference Between Stanford And Harvard Mba

1. Applications (Class of 2017)
HBS
9,686
Stanford GSB:
7,899
2. Stanford is more difficult to get in: (7.1% vs. 11% acceptance rate)
3. Stanford alumni mostly work in finance and IT; whereas Harvard alumni are more spread out across sectors with finance having the biggest share.
4. HBS is looking for leaders. The school is looking for potential leaders and future CEOs, who have the ability to influence, motivate, inspire, and convince other people to affect change without being too authoritative or using traditional leadership methods.
5. Stanford GSB looks for students who possess leadership potential and whose principles are aligned with the school’s values. It prefers individuals who can engage rigorously in research-supported learning processes, interdisciplinary studies, and community service.
6. The campus of Stanford’s Graduate School of Business is small and compact: a complex of eight new, separate buildings created around three quadrangles opened in 2011 and a single residence hall.
7. Harvard Business School, on the other hand, is like a university onto itself with 35 separate buildings on 40 acres of property along the Charles River.
8. The atmosphere is more mellow, more informal, and less competitive at GSB than at HBS.
9. Stanford has a higher average GMAT score for enrolling students: (732 vs. 730)
10. HBS has larger classroom strengths (about 950) compared with GSB (about 400). 
11. GSB prefers candidates with some work/business background to relatively young and inexperienced applicants. On the other hand, HBS often takes in applicants with less experience but with excellent academic and other achievements. 
12. Both schools have the same average post-graduation salary: ($125,000 USD)
13. Stanford has a lower total program cost: ($119,100 USD vs. $122,450 USD)
14. GSB is more likely to inspire its students to become technology entrepreneurs, while HBS send their students to topnotch consulting companies or to Wall Street.