40% of Wharton Apps To Take New Test

Roughly four of every ten MBA applicants to the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School will be invited to a new team-based discussion as part of the school’s admission process, according to the school’s admissions director. That’s the same percentage of applicants who pass the first application hurdle and are typically invited to an admissions interview at the school.

In an interview with Poets&Quants, Wharton Admissions Director Ankur Kumar said that applicants will receive their invites to the new test at the same time they are sent their interview invitations. The majority of the team-based discussions, featuring five to six applicants at a time, will be held on campus. But Wharton also will conduct the team-based exercise in major cities all over the world—just as it does admission interviews.

For Wharton’s Class of 2013, about 2,580 of 6,442 applicants were interviewed. So if the size of the school’s applicant pool is similar, Wharton will have to hold as many as 500 of the new team-based discussions to accommodate the new and novel admissions test. Kumar said the first of the discussions would be held in early November, after first-round applicants get their invites for both interviews and the team meetings. Wharton accepts about 19% of its MBA applicants.

Kumar said that virtually all of the on-campus discussions would be managed and observed by Wharton Admission Fellows, a group of roughly 45 second-year MBA students who volunteer to help with admissions. “We’ll also have the admissions team traveling around the world so we’ll have slots in every region of the world for our international applicants,” she said.

This makes Wharton the only prominent business school in the world that requires a team-based exercise for entrance to its MBA program. Few other schools are expected to follow Wharton’s lead, primarily because of how labor intensive the new test will be. So the discussion could give Wharton an advantage over key B-school rivals in picking some of the more articulate, personable, and thoughtful candidates in this year’s elite MBA applicant pool—and in rejecting candidates unable to withstand the rigors and exposure of a team-based discussion.

Wharton piloted the new test on a small group of about 30 third round candidates earlier this year. The stated goal, according to an email then sent to MBA applicants, was to create “a lively and thoughtful discussion based on a real-world business scenario. Our hope is that through a team-based discussion, applicants will not only be able to present how they approach and think about certain situations, but will also have a chance to experience, firsthand, the team work experience and group learning dynamic that is central to our program.”

Wharton officially announced on July 20 that it had decided to make the discussion part of its admissions process this year after an evaluation of the pilot. “After thoughtful discussion and positive feedback, we are excited to officially launch this evaluation method during the upcoming application cycle,” said Vice Dean Ulrich, in a statement on the school’s website. “The team-based discussions will allow candidates the opportunity to interact with fellow applicants through discourse involving real-world business scenarios, which will highlight how they approach and analyze specific situations. We believe that this type of assessment also serves as a tool to take prospective students ‘off the page’ and allows us to see firsthand the ways in which they can contribute to our community of diverse learners and leaders.”

In a brief interview with Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Ulrich said that one of the reasons for the new test is to get MBA applicants in “an unscripted environment,” free from the influence of admission consultants and other advice givers. “Over the last 10 to 20 years, because of blogs and the applicant community and discussion forums, people have developed a really good sense of what the admissions process looks like, down to what kinds of questions are asked and how they manage the interview,” he said. “So in some ways that was one of the reasons we wanted to try some other approaches, because it had become kind of a game in which everyone knew the rules. We wanted to get the applicants in an unscripted environment, with a more dynamic kind of interaction. That was one of the main goals.”

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