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I am moving to the school decision moment with other round 1 applicants. It is tougher than I thought!
At this point, one thing that worries me a little about Haas is the following statistic:
Full-time graduates employed at graduation: 76% Full-time graduates employed three months after graduation: 91% (the denominator is "students known to be seeking jobs")
It is the lowest among the schools I applied to. I know it would be necessary to perform a statistical test to find out whether this difference is significant, but it seems to be. Ross' for example is 87,5%/96%.
Does anyone have a clue on how to read this? Is it something to worry about?
Thank you!
Archived Berkeley Haas Discussion
Hi there,
You've stumbled upon an old discussion from our Berkeley Haas Forum
that's now outdated and has been archived. No more replies are possible here.
Interested in current discussions? Feel free to dive into our dedicated Berkeley Haas Forum
for all fresh things related to the Berkeley Haas MBA program.
I am moving to the school decision moment with other round 1 applicants. It is tougher than I thought!
At this point, one thing that worries me a little about Haas is the following statistic:
Full-time graduates employed at graduation: 76% Full-time graduates employed three months after graduation: 91% (the denominator is "students known to be seeking jobs")
It is the lowest among the schools I applied to. I know it would be necessary to perform a statistical test to find out whether this difference is significant, but it seems to be. Ross' for example is 87,5%/96%.
Does anyone have a clue on how to read this? Is it something to worry about?
Thank you!
Show more
I just dug up some quick data, but the discrepancy doesn't seem to be isolated to Haas. For example, Stanford is 81/95 and UCLA is 76/90. Just speculating, but it may have something to do with being in California and job placement out west versus midwest/northeast.
And as to whether it's something to worry about, those numbers may be the lowest of the schools to which you've applied, but they aren't exactly "low."
You've stumbled upon an old discussion from our Berkeley Haas Forum
that's now outdated and has been archived. No more replies are possible here.
Interested in current discussions? Feel free to dive into our dedicated Berkeley Haas Forum
for all fresh things related to the Berkeley Haas MBA program.