The Number of Women in Full-time MBA Programs Continues to Grow

According to a Forté Foundation analysis, the number of women matriculating to full-time MBA programs continues to grow. In 2022, among the 56 members of the Forte Foundation coalition, women’s enrollment averaged 41.4 percent, up slightly from 41.2 percent in 2021. This is an increase of almost ten percentage points from 2011. Two full-time MBA programs achieved gender parity: Johns Hopkins’ Carey and University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton. And, an increasing number of programs came close; in 2022, 17 programs enrolled at least 45 percent women (see list below), up from 10 the year before. There were zero in 2012. 

“It’s exciting and gratifying to see the impact of our efforts over the last two decades to close the gender parity gap in MBA programs,” Elissa Sangster, Forté’s CEO, told Bizwomen, an online business journal. “More women today understand the opportunities an MBA offers and our work has helped build the pipeline of young women interested in business careers and advancing to leadership,” she said.

Full-time MBA programs where women’s enrollment reached at least 45 percent in 2022: 

Johns Hopkins University (Carey): 52 percent

University of Pennsylvania (Wharton): 50 percent

Southern Methodist University (Cox): 48 percent

Duke University (Fuqua): 48 percent

Northwestern University (Kellogg): 48 percent

Oxford University (Saïd): 48 percent

Washington University in St. Louis (Olin): 47 percent

University of Cambridge (Judge): 47 percent

George Washington University: 47 percent

University of California-Berkeley (Haas): 46 percent

Harvard Business School: 46 percent

University of Southern California (Marshall): 46 percent

MIT (Sloan): 46 percent

New York University (Stern): 45 percent

Alliance Manchester School of Business: 45 percent

Dartmouth College (Tuck): 45 percent

Columbia University: 45 percent