In a survey of 5,000 MBA students, for example, more than half acknowledged that they cheat.  Yet only one in twenty, or five percent, of the Deans of the top 100 US Business Schools thought they "might have an academic integrity problem."  Moreover, top scholars like Jeffrey Pfeffer of Stanford and Henry Mintzberg of McGill University have described business school MBAs as largely irrelevant and too focused on analysis rather than on people. Finally, despite the fact that more than half of the US population under 18 is now non-Caucasian, American universities have consistently failed to train American-born minorities in doctoral programs -- such as business -- where a 2006 report indicated that 53% of doctoral candidates are minorities but only 5% are Native Americans, American-born Hispanic, or American-born Blacks. . . and the problem is only getting worse.

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