- Joined
- 5/2/06
- Messages
- 12,757
- Points
- 273
You may be onto something here. CMU and UCB quant programs are offered by their respective business schools and they do follow some standard protocol on stats reporting. Columbia doesn't publish any stats because they aren't required.3) I found a general lack of transparency from Columbia that compares very unfavorably against Berkeley and CMU. For instance they don't publish the median salary, they don't give a "class profile" or show a complete list of students. They also don't give many details about the outcome of their students, just a list of "recruiting firms" and "positions". Check CMU's or UCB's webpage to see how this should be reported.
There are many programs that do not publish their admission and employment stats for various reasons. And I don't see that changing soon unless applicants demand so.
As evident here, people still pay to go to such programs even without knowing how many of their graduates will even get a job.