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Too many business majors?
By Ed Cohen

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It won't surprise anyone to hear that business is a popular major. But would you believe that the percentage of undergrads who major in business at Notre Dame is more than quadruple the average at the nation's 20 highest-rated private universities?

The shift has become so pronounced that Notre Dame's administration is considering capping the number of students allowed to major in business.

Last year a report from the provost's office to University trustees showed that almost one out of every three members of the class of 2003 earned a business degree. That was up from about one in four 10 years ago and about one in five 25 years ago. The average at the other national universities ranked in the top 20 by U.S. News & World Report is just 7 percent.

The trend reflects a reality of the higher education marketplace, namely, that for the past couple of decades, more and more students have wanted to train for professional careers in business -- as opposed to getting, say, a broad-based liberal arts education. But the University's officers aren't sure they want to let market forces alone determine the makeup of the student body. Catholic universities have traditionally emphasized the humanities. Plus the business college is overflowing with would-be accountants and managers.

No decisions are imminent, but one proposal being floated by the college would cap the number of majors while guaranteeing nonmajors the opportunity to take up to six business courses. With the college so crowded with majors, nonmajors are frozen out of most courses now.

(January 2004)

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Mendoza College of Business

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