Lauching Based Interviews for MBA Admissions 2014 - The Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan plans to launch a team-based interview as part of its MBA admissions process for 2014. The interviews, unlike traditional one-on-one or group interviews, bring together several applicants to give the admissions team a chance to evaluate them based on how they interact. Ross is the second major business school to experiment with this approach.
For the pilot, some of the people who had been invited for the traditional one-on-one interview were highly encouraged to participate in the group exercise. The admissions committee told them that it would not be part of the evaluation of their application. About 110 applicants in all participated in the three locations. Alumni and second-year students served as evaluators (see HERE).
The applicants sat at tables in groups of four to six with at least one evaluator. First, they were given two random words and 10 minutes to prepare an individual presentation that connected the words in some way. They could take any direction, from serious to humorous, from analytical to opinionated, says Kwon. Next, the group was given a set of random words and 20 minutes to prepare a team presentation that used the words to address a problem and solution.
“Different things come out in a group interview,” says Kwon. “It creates a more complete picture of what the applicant will be like in a classroom and in our community.”
Kwon consulted the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, which launched its team-based interviews in the fall. The Ross School’s process is slightly different. Wharton sends candidates a question ahead of the interview and then puts them in groups of no more than six to prepare and present their conclusions and recommendations. The group has 35 minutes from start to finish. Either second-year students or admissions committee members evaluate the interviews.
At Ross, Kwon chose to use random words to ensure that applicants could not prepare much ahead of time, she says. The traditional one-on-one interview has become stale, says Kwon, because many applicants see the questions online ahead of time, get the aid of admissions consultants, and over-rehearse.
Indeed, the Wharton and Ross schools turned to the group interview to see how applicants react on their feet, work in teams, and speak in public. Ankur Kumar, Wharton’s director of MBA admissions and financial aid (see HERE), says it’s also an opportunity for applicants to get a window into the culture at the business school, where students are expected to participate in about 15 to 25 teams during their two years in the program.
“We’re not trying to pull any punches or trick applicants,” says Kumar. “We’re trying to get to know the applicants in a multi-dimensional form.”
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