Tuition $87,968
In-State $62,022
Gender and Race Breakdown Among US Students, Compared with Other US Schools
Visit Diversity Index page for more data. Gender is for whole class. Race data only for US students.
Male
Female/​non-binary
White
Asian
Black
Hispanic
Percent of Hires in Each Industry (Top 3)
42 graduates hired in total
Nationalities (top 5)
Total Number of Nationalities: 12
Campus Atmosphere
- Completely Disagree
- Strongly Disagree
- Somewhat Disagree
- Neutral
- Somewhat Agree
- Strongly Agree
- Completely Agree
Representative comments from students and alumni on what's best about this MBA program
The small class size gave me a chance to build deeper connections (real networking, not superficial networking) with my classmates, connections that have already paid off. My colleagues who attended other business schools have not reported similar deep relationships.
The faculty really care and I want to give an example. When the “winter freeze” hit Texas our accounting prof Dr. Sarah Rice communicated with us daily and even offered to pay and transport students to hotels if they were out of power/ water. This faculty really cares about their students and I appreciate their commitment to us not just as students but as individuals.
The Aggie culture and focus on team work and team building. We work in diverse teams throughout the program and it helps you understand how to work with people with diverse skills, backgrounds, and strengths/weaknesses.
Collaboration, diversity, networking, leadership. The cost of tuition was fantastic. I work with MBA peers who took 6 figure loans while A&M was the most affordable program. It was a full time program but only a year and a half. In my MBA rotational program at my employer, I was 6 months ahead of peers who graduated in June versus December (A&M)
I truly think the people who run administration and the career service office give you their best to help you land networking and job opportunities.