Saint Mary-of-the-Woods updates MBA structure
Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College folded MBA concentrations into the core degree, changing how students complete the program.

Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College folded MBA concentrations into the core degree.
Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College has changed how students earn its Master of Business Administration, and the practical effect is simple: the concentrations now sit inside the degree instead of being added on top. That matters because MBA students often compare programs by total credits, total tuition, and how quickly they can finish.
The college said the concentrations were previously offered as additional credit hours. Folding them into the core program changes the math for students who want a focused business degree without padding the total workload.
| Program detail | What changed | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| MBA structure | Concentrations moved into core requirements | Students complete specialization work inside the main degree |
| Prior setup | Concentrations were extra credit hours | Students faced more coursework on top of the base MBA |
| Degree planning | Integrated concentration model | Cleaner path for scheduling, budgeting, and graduation planning |
What the change means for MBA students
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For working adults, the biggest issue in graduate school is rarely the syllabus. It is time. An MBA that keeps specialization inside the core degree can reduce the friction around course planning, especially for students balancing jobs, family obligations, and commuting.

That also changes how prospective students compare programs. A school that asks for extra credit hours for a concentration can look more expensive or more time-consuming, even when the headline tuition is similar. Integrating the concentration makes the degree easier to explain and easier to sell.
- Students can map the program with fewer add-on credits.
- Specialization work becomes part of the main degree path.
- Program comparisons get simpler for applicants reviewing tuition and time-to-completion.
Why schools keep redesigning MBA formats
Graduate business programs have spent years trying to fit a wider mix of students. Some want a general management degree. Others want a path tied to leadership, accounting, or another business focus. Schools that package those options cleanly usually make the admissions conversation easier.
That is especially true for smaller colleges, where clarity matters as much as brand recognition. If a program is easier to understand in one sitting, it has a better shot at converting an interested applicant into an enrolled student.
“The most important thing for business schools is to think about how they can be relevant for the students they serve,” said AACSB president and CEO Lily Bi. “Students are looking for programs that prepare them for the future of work.”
Bi’s point lines up with the direction many graduate programs are taking: make the degree more legible, make the path more direct, and make the value easier to see before a student applies.
How this compares with a traditional MBA path
Traditional MBA structures often separate the core degree from any concentration or specialization. That can be fine for students who want flexibility, but it can also create a longer checklist before graduation.

Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College is taking the opposite approach. Instead of treating concentration courses like an optional add-on, the school is making them part of the degree itself. That is a small structural change on paper, but it can be a meaningful one for students choosing between programs.
- Traditional MBA: core courses first, specialization later.
- Integrated MBA: specialization appears inside the standard degree plan.
- Student impact: fewer surprises when reviewing credits, scheduling, and completion requirements.
For applicants, the question is no longer whether the school offers a concentration. The better question is whether the concentration is built in a way that saves time and keeps the degree easy to finish.
If Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College markets this update clearly, it could make the MBA more attractive to students who want a focused graduate business degree without extra administrative friction. The real test is whether the new structure helps enrollment and completion rates over the next admissions cycle.
What to watch next
The next thing to watch is how the college describes the updated MBA in admissions materials. If the school emphasizes faster planning, clearer degree paths, and fewer extra credits, it may have found a better way to compete for adult learners.
For students comparing MBA programs this year, the takeaway is straightforward: ask how many credits are truly required for the concentration, and whether the specialization is built into the degree or added after the fact.
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