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A Statement for Applicants in Areas Affected by the Coronavirus

A Message from Professor John-Paul Ferguson, Academic Director of the MBA Program

As I write this, the Chinese government and the World Health Organization, along with many others in China and abroad, are working to contain the new coronavirus outbreak that appears to have begun in Wuhan. My sympathies, and those of everyone at Desautels, are with the Chinese people and with those foreign nationals who are involved. Disease knows no borders, and the service of those struggling to contain the outbreak is a service to us all.

On Friday 14 February, the Graduate Management Admission Council (who administers the GMAT) announced that, per the guidance of China’s National Education Examinations Authority, they were Similarly, GRE, IELTS and TOEFL tests have been canceled by their providers, per NEEA guidance. We rely on all of these for student admissions, and so this bears on our work here.

We want to make every effort we can to accommodate applicants in Mainland China who have been affected by this. À¦°óSMÉçÇø has recently chosen to accept the Duolingo English Test (DET) as a means to demonstrate English competency among undergraduate applicants during this crisis. Today we have decided to do the same for applicants to the MBA program from Mainland China. Unlike the TOEFL, which has to be taken at a testing centre, the DET can be taken at home. As with Desautels’ Bachelor of Commerce, we will look for scores of 120 or better on the DET.

We lack a similar substitute for the GMAT and GRE. While standardized test scores are not the only criterion for admission, they are a significant one. We want to assure anyone who has already begun an application but has not yet been able to take their exam because of this suspension that, if this health crisis prevents us from completing the admissions process, we will refund their application payment.

The situation going forward from today is less clear. The MBA program’s deadline for international applications is 15 March, which means it will be impossible for someone in Mainland China to complete an application if they have not already taken the GMAT or GRE. We will of course still consider applications with test scores. We are very sorry if you fall in this situation, which is unfortunate and regrettable, but also out of our control. We will of course still consider applications with test scores.

This is a difficult statement to write. I do not want these bureaucratic details to obscure the very human drama of this health crisis. Our fervent hope is that this crisis ends soon.

John-Paul Ferguson
Academic Director, MBA Program

Photo by Matteo Fusco on Unsplash

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