Sunday, June 14, 2020
Deans QA Andrea Hershatter, Emorys Goizueta Business School
Deans QA: Andrea Hershatter, Emorys Goizueta Business School by: Andrea Carter on June 11, 2018 | 0 Comments Comments 468 Views June 11, 2018Andrea Hershatter is Senior Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education at Emory Universitys Goizueta Business School. Photo courtesy of Goizueta Business SchoolAs dean of the undergraduate business program at Emory University, Andrea Hershatter has become a master of riding the tide. When it comes to the evolution of the business school ââ¬â and business education as a whole ââ¬â sheââ¬â¢s seen and experienced a lot. In 1988 when she first arrived, the school hadnââ¬â¢t even been named Goizueta Business School yet. Whatââ¬â¢s more, the idea of ââ¬Å"co-curricularâ⬠activities for undergraduate students wasnââ¬â¢t nearly as meaningful as it is today. And technology? Letââ¬â¢s just say technology wasnââ¬â¢t the thin line between keeping up or falling behind. Thirty years later, Goizueta is celebrating the 25th a nniversary of its naming and a centennial commemoration of the schoolââ¬â¢s founding is just around the corner in 2019. A two-year program that is ranked among the top 15 in PoetsQuantsââ¬â¢ Best Undergraduate Business Programs, Goizueta undergrad is best known for requiring all students to first spend two years immersed in liberal arts before entering into the business school. Though a differentiator, Hershatter also attributes this rule to Goizuetaââ¬â¢s exceptionally high ââ¬â 80% ââ¬â acceptance rate. ââ¬Å"Everybody who is good enough to get into Emory at the front end has the capacity to come into the business school,â⬠she says.In an in-depth interview, Hershatter gives PoetsQuants the dish on a highly intense review of the business curriculum thatââ¬â¢s currently underway, what has her most excited about being a part of the business school right now, and how best to prepare students for the ever-changing, ever-evolving business world. Hint: it has n othing to do with hitting the ground running the first day on the job.PQ: What makes the undergraduate business experience at Goizueta unique? Hershatter: First of all, for students it starts with choosing the university. For us, that is particularly relevant because they start in the college. Nobody is pre-admitted or pre-committing to the business school. Emory has an outstanding reputation for liberal arts and weââ¬â¢re in a wonderful and vibrant city. Thereââ¬â¢s so much going on here from a business perspective. We bring all the strengths of the university ââ¬â one of the worldââ¬â¢s finest creative departments all the way to our strengths in medicine and having the Center for Disease Control on campus. Part of it starts there. Andrea Hershatter joined the business school at Emory University in 1988 then became dean of Goizuetas undergraduate program in the mid 1990s. She also teaches entrepreneurship courses at the school. Photo courtesy of Goizueta Business Schoo lWithin the business school there are probably three or four things that distinguish us. Most notably first is our interconnection with liberal arts. I love that our faculty are now calling it the double helix and about a quarter of our students complete other majors in liberal arts. Our size and internal communal interaction is also very compelling for a lot of students. We graduate about 400 students a year. Itââ¬â¢s not so small that it doesntââ¬â¢ have scope and range, but not so big that you lose the personal approach. This is very much felt in the interaction between students and between faculty and students to get involved in activities and take on leadership roles.Another thing that makes the experience unique is that a little over a quarter of our students study abroad. But itââ¬â¢s body-to-body. For every student we send abroad, we get a student from the school where weââ¬â¢re sending them. Each year 100 or so students come to us from the worldââ¬â¢s best bu siness schools.Whatââ¬â¢s Goizuetaââ¬â¢s trademark in a crowded B-school market?While liberal arts is a very strong piece of who we are, I believe the defining experience of this BBA program is that it is structured to prepare you for as narrow or as broad a set of expertise as any student desires. That is partially about integration with liberal arts, but also if you want to go into finance, we probably have 25 electives in finance. There are no doctoral students teaching. The same professors who teach in the MBA program also teach our BBAs. If a student wants to get very focused on a specific functional field, theyââ¬â¢ll find incredible strengths amongst our faculty in that program.How has business education evolved since youââ¬â¢ve been in the business school?It used to be enough to be a functional expert in a particular field. Now, we as business schools have to have individual electives and cross-cutting curricular themes to prepare students for a dynamic, evolving world. Things have moved beyond function and industry to acquiring skills and knowledge to apply in interesting ways across a variety of functions and industries throughout studentsââ¬â¢ careers.The second way itââ¬â¢s changed is the increase in co-curricular objectives. There was no such thing when I was in undergrad. We now spend as much time with our students and they spend as much time engaged with us in things that happen outside the classroom as inside. Leadership development, professional training, opportunities to work on an applied practicum, something experiential, a service-based project, a study abroad experience. All undergrad programs think very carefully about training students as whole people ââ¬â not just about giving them exposure to particular courses and knowledge. But, I want to be careful in saying this because I donââ¬â¢t think that part goes away. It remains a key component to undergraduate business education.How have students changed over the y ears? Youââ¬â¢re talking to someone whoââ¬â¢s spent a lot of time consulting on and lecturing about millennials. Of course Iââ¬â¢ve seen changes. Over time, I think the shift from a Gen X population to a Millennial population has been along two important lines. First, as technology develops, itââ¬â¢s absolutely the case that they expect and need us to be on the cutting edge, providing them with not only access to the most advanced technology for use in business, but also with an understanding of how to appropriately leverage its advantages.Secondly, this generation was raised by a population across all socioeconomic categories. With it comes a population of parents willing to expend increasing percentages to provide sons and daughters with access to the best education, opportunities, and exposure they can afford to provide. The reason has to do with the parental sense ââ¬â which is true ââ¬â that our grads are being asked to navigate a messy world with big, compl icated problems. So every tool we give them matters.If Iââ¬â¢m a parent investing all this time, money, and energy, then I am not a passive consumer. Weââ¬â¢ve seen parents being very, very involved from preschool all the way through college. Parents who say to us, Iââ¬â¢ve held them to this standard and heresââ¬â¢ what I need you, the school, to do to maximize their potential.Our response to the students is, ââ¬ËWe are only as good as you are. Weââ¬â¢re relying on you, our students, to drive us forward, tell us what you need to excel here, and how to make you the most effective graduates we possibly can.ââ¬â¢ And we mean it. That message comes with a huge benefit to the schools in that students, faculty, staff, and sometimes parents are active participants in the process of growing and evolving and preparing that student. But it also comes with very high expectations from students and family on what the school will provide ââ¬â opportunities, networks, infr astructure, and more ââ¬â in order to ensure they have every possible opportunity to excel. Page 1 of 212à »
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