Best Business School Rankings 2024–25
See the latest Willamette (Atkinson) data

Willamette (Atkinson)

Salem, OR

#70
US
4
from 2023
49
Class size
$53,468
Tuition
Note: Tuition amount is the figure advertised by the school and includes mandatory fees and other costs. Find more details on the school's website : https://willamette.edu/mba/index.html .

Gender and Race Breakdown Among US Students, Compared with Other US Schools - Willamette (Atkinson)

Visit Diversity Index page for more data. Gender is for whole class. Race data only for US students.

Male

0%100%61.0%

Female/​non-binary

0%100%39.0%

White

0%100%57.7% of US population61.0%

Asian

0%100%7.3% of US population17.0%

Black

0%100%14.4% of US population8.0%

Hispanic

0%100%19.1% of US population17.0%

Percent of Hires in Each Industry (Top 3) - Willamette (Atkinson)

33 graduates hired in total

Technology 24.2%
Financial 12.1%
Retail 9.1%

Nationalities (top 5) - Willamette (Atkinson)

Total Number of Nationalities: 7

United States 76.0%
Saudi Arabia 13.0%
India 2.0%
Bangladesh 2.0%
Cameroon 2.0%

Campus Atmosphere - Willamette (Atkinson)

  • Completely Disagree
  • Strongly Disagree
  • Somewhat Disagree
  • Neutral
  • Somewhat Agree
  • Strongly Agree
  • Completely Agree

Women are well represented among my school’s faculty and administration

Female protagonists are well represented in case studies

LGBTQ students are given equal/adequate opportunity to participate in class discussions and on teams

Social activities are generally inclusive towards LGBTQ students

Minorities are well represented among the faculty and administration

Minority protagonists are well represented in case studies

* Has fewer than five respondents

Representative comments from students and alumni on what's best about this MBA program - Willamette (Atkinson)

The experiential courses are fantastic and offer real consequences that help to build a résumé.

The opportunities for collaboration/teamwork in classes. It is great being able to work with diverse teams in different scenarios.

Experiential learning and real-life courses such as PACE, entrepreneurship and grant administration.

Experiential learning via being a part of the angel investing course, where students can invest up to $100,000 equity in startups. Hands-on consulting projects with real companies.