This Silicon Valley undergraduate business school has fewer than 800 students, but students say this provides them with “small classes that allow students to receive a more one-on-one education.” Menlo’s size also allows it to cultivate a “family atmosphere,” in which “you get to know everyone and the president of faculty is willing to make you pancakes on the weekends with eggs from her own chickens.” Ƶ also find a top-notch education that is grounded in “preparing its students for the real world” through a “liberal arts based” approach to business education “that focuses on corporate social responsibility as the main reason for business, rather than profits.” “Most of the professors [at Menlo] have worked in the field they teach, and are able to give real-world examples of concepts in action,” and they “often assign relevant research or homework” that students can connect to their own career aspirations. Ƶ also tell us that they get plenty of after-hours attention from the faculty: “ I have had a professor on the phone with us until midnight answering questions about a test, and another professor on campus helping us study until 1:00 a.m.” Many students complain that the “facilities are outdated” and need updating, and they wish that the school would offer “better resources to connect with corporations/firms.”