The University of Cambridge is planning to launch a new
four-year course, the Doctor of Business, which could be approved on 24 May by
the university's governing Regent House. The course, costing approximately
£230,000 ($333,707), is billed as one of the most expensive degrees in the
world.
However, the course, which is likely to start in October
2017, will take only one to two students a year and will be known as the Bus.D,
equivalent to a PhD.
"It is consistent with Cambridge Judge Business
School's long-term strategy and with the university's research impact
objectives.
"The degree will meet an evident demand from highly
placed senior executives in business, NGOs, charities, and similar organizations,
who are accomplished leaders who have built or run major companies and
organizations," says the University's journal.
The degree is for individuals at very senior levels in their
careers rather than those in their early or mid-careers.
"This differentiation, coupled with Cambridge's
reputation, should make it attractive to the most senior leaders around the
world, and market research undertaken by Cambridge Judge Business School
indicates that the degree is likely to attract significant interest," the
general board's proposal said.
"It is expected that over the duration of the Bus.D,
the student's total time commitment will be equivalent to the full-time
PhD" and will lead to a dissertation of 200 pages in 'maximal
length'," according to the proposal.
The proposed course has also come in for some criticism
especially regarding its fees.
Gill Evans, a veteran professor of medieval theology at
Cambridge, has called business schools "a lucrative bolt-on for a
university" and says that "nearly a quarter of a million per doctoral
student is a nice little earner" in her draft speech to be presented on 24
May at Regent Hose, as reported in The Times Higher Education.
She has also called the fees "gigantic", asking
"where is the intellectual justification for this departure into new
doctoral territory?"
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