The Harvard Business School (HBS), part of Harvard University in Boston, Massachusetts, has been in operation for more than a century. Located on 40 acres, the HBS is one of 33 buildings on campus. Originally opened in 1908, the HBS was first located in Harvard Yard until it moved to its present campus in 1927. Along with a strong curriculum, HBS also offers students more than 70 clubs and more than 200 leadership positions within the Student Association.
Stanford's Graduate School of Business (GBS) was created in 1925 in Stanford, Connecticut. More than 900 students attend Stanford GSB and can select from the following programs: two-year MBA program, Stanford Sloan Master's program, Ph.D. program for future academics, executive education programs for experienced managers and the faculty research program. The mission of the Stanford GBS is "to create ideas that deepen and advance our understanding of management and with those ideas to develop innovative, principled, and insightful leaders who change the world."
The Chicago Booth School of Business (CBSB) is part of the University of Chicago in Chicago, Illinois. Founded in 1898, the CBSB has grown to include more than 43,000 alumni. The CBSB has six Nobel Prize winners on staff, making CBSB the first business school to accomplish this. The founding chapter of the National Black MBA Association was formed at CBSB. The CBSB offers full-time, evening and weekend programs, as well as executive programs.
Within Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, is the Tuck School of Business. The Tuck school was founded in 1900 and was named the first graduate school of management. It is also one of three professional schools at Dartmouth College. Tuck offers only a full-time MBA program. Tuck has nearly 50 full-time faculty and more than 500 MBA students. The Tuck school believes that "by setting high standards for our programs, ourselves as individuals, and for our organization, we strive for excellence in all our endeavors."