Word: mba
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...practice of prohibiting students from disclosing their grades, Acting Dean Jay O. Light announced in a letter to the HBS student body yesterday. The new policy, which will give students the option of showing their grades to potential employers, will apply to future classes, but will not affect MBA candidates currently enrolled at the school. In yesterday’s letter, Light wrote that the new policy was crafted to let HBS students take personal responsibility for their academic work. “Fundamentally, I believe it is inappropriate for HBS to dictate to students what they can and cannot...
...three weeks since Richard S. Ruback, chair of the Masters of Business Administration (MBA) Program, said he might do away with the non-disclosure policy, a heated debate has erupted on the HBS campus, with students arguing that the switch could rupture an atmosphere of goodwill at the school, where they have been prohibited from revealing their grades to potential employers since...
...1990s, HBS had a large-scale review of the MBA program that we called ‘Leadership and Learning,’” said Badaracco. “This led to a lot of different experiments in the program, of which non-disclosure...
...wrong when he writes in his dissenting opinion (“No Value Added” Dec. 1) that HBS “administrators...did not consult the school’s student leaders until yesterday.” In fact, Professor Rick Ruback, the chair of the MBA Program, was getting together with students long before that. He talked with the student Senate about this matter on Oct. 25. On Nov. 10, he met with the Student Association Academic Committee (the standing committee focusing on these kinds of issues), which recommended a course of action that was followed...
...world certainly values the writing and analytical skills honed by the Film Studies major. Yale’s Aaron Gerow, the Director of Undergraduate Studies, Film Studies Program, understands that contemporary demands necessitate a strong department. “With the New York Times calling Film Studies the next MBA,” he says, referencing a March 2005 article, “Film Studies is becoming an important discipline in both academia and the “real world.” Harvard is hardly the first major American university to welcome Film Studies to its campus. Yale...