Founded in 1922, the Northeastern University D'Amore-McKim School of Business, affiliated with Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, took its current name in 2012 after one of the largest endowments to a business school in the US ($60 million dollars).
The school has over 5,500 students and is split 70-30 between undergraduate and graduate students. Students come from more than 56 countries and 110 cities, with 34 percent of the student body coming from abroad.
Undergraduate courses are offered in four- and five-year programs leading to the BSc in Business Administration. An overseas option is as a BSc in International Business. There are also combined majors and minors over seven business “concentrations”, including: accounting; entrepreneurship and innovation; finance; management; management information systems; marketing and supply chain management. Undergraduate students also benefit from the Collaborative Education network of corporate partners.
Graduate programs include the MBA, available as a full-time (with concentrations in business analysis, corporate innovation and venture, entrepreneurship, finance, health care management, international business, leading people and organizations,
marketing, supply chain management), part-time and online; and master's degrees in innovation, international management, accounting finance, online finance, taxation, online taxation, international business, technology entrepreneurship and business analysis. Dual degrees and certificates are also available.
Graduate students can take advantage of a unique hands-on, experiential opportunity by managing the 360 Huntington Fund, which comes from a portion of Northeastern University's endowment.
Students at D'Amore-McKim can take advantage of the opportunity to study abroad through the International Study Abroad Program. Destinations include China, Russia, Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Chile, Turkey and Greece.
D'Amore-McKim is accredited by AACSB International. About 99 percent of undergraduate degree recipients who responded to a survey received a job offer within nine months of graduation, while 96 percent of 2016 full-time MBA students started jobs within three months of graduation.