Friday, June 26, 2020
The Small And Mighty Haas Undergrad Program
The Small And Mighty Haas Undergrad Program by: Nathan Allen on July 07, 2015 | 0 Comments Comments 15,789 Views July 7, 2015Erika Walker, assistant dean of the undergraduate program at Berkeley Haas is pictured center with her team. Photo by Jim BlockSometimes, stature can be deceptive. And with about 700 undergraduate students, the University of California-Berkeley Haas School of Business is indeed small in stature when compared with The Wharton School (more than 2,500 undergrads), Notre Dames Mendoza (nearly 2,000 undergrads), and many others. But in terms of quality of education and students, this David of a business school can go toe-to-toe with any Goliath. Nestled in between the Eucalyptus coveredà Berkeley hills and historically avant-gardeà and counterculture hub, Telegraph Avenue, the school largely reflects its surroundingsââ¬âdiverse, progressive, and atypical.Berkeley Haas undergraduate program is two years (one of the reasons for a relatively small populati on) and students either enter as continuing Berkeley students or transfer students. The school reserves about 260 slots for students already enrolled at UC-Berkeley and about 90 slots for students transferring from community colleges. And the competition for a spot is fierce. This past application cycle, the school saw nearly 700 continuing UC-Berkeley applications and almost 1,800 transfer applicants. This, of course, comes at little surprise considering the schools placement in rankings.à PoetsQuantsà ranks the school at 6th. Theà U.S. News World Report rankings have Berkeley Haas tied with MITs undergraduate program at 2nd.Once in the program, students can expect a global management-oriented curriculum with a strong liberal arts twist. They can also expect to be around other students who arent like themselves. For the entering class of 2016, more than 61% are minorities and another 46% are women. According to Erika Walker, assistant dean of undergraduate studies at Berkele y Haas, students desired by the school also have a diverse educational background. For example, many have already started businesses or held leadership roles of some sort.Any other doubt of Berkeley Haas strength is met with robust employment stats. For the class of 2014, 85% had jobs secured three months after graduation. But dont let the proximity to tech-rich Silicon Valley fool you. In 2014, the majority of graduates ended up accountancy (34%), consulting services (24%), or financial services (20%). Technology and science was the next most popular career path at 17%. Although, when the tech giants are hiring, theyre definitely looking closely at UC-Berkeley.According to earlierà PoetsQuants reporting on Payscale data, Berkeley Haas graduates make more on average at entry-level ($72,000 with five years or less of experience) and mid-career ($138,300 at 15 years of experience) than graduates of any other business school in the United States. Haas graduates also enjoy a better RO I than graduates of other schoolsââ¬âseeing more than a $1.1 million return after 20 years for in-state tuition and more than $1 million for out-of-state tuition.Walker, who recently sat down for an interview withà PoetsQuants,à has been at Berkeley Haas for more than a decade. In 2014, she became the assistant dean for undergraduate studies. In thisà interview, Walker outlines everything from new and upcoming curriculum developments to how Haas is making changes to appease the millennial generation.PoetsQuants:à Whatââ¬â¢s going on thatââ¬â¢s new and unique at Haas?Erika Walker: Well, I think first I should probably explain just how our program is set up because we are a little different from how other programs are set up. There are some programs like us, but weââ¬â¢re a two-year program. So students actually apply to us in their second year, during their sophomore year. And weââ¬â¢re a general management program, so we donââ¬â¢t have majors within the ma jor. We have one general program, which is global management. But other than that, students are getting a general management education, and thereââ¬â¢s flexibility within the major. So, theyââ¬â¢re able to take all the core classes and then they can pick-and-choose and kind of tailor to their interests the various electives that are available to them.One way in which we are very similar to other programs is that students are required to take business courses, but theyre also required to take courses outside of business within liberal arts. And thatââ¬â¢s a degree requirement. So thatââ¬â¢s the way in which weââ¬â¢ve approached liberal arts and making sure that was part of an undergraduate business education.But whatââ¬â¢s changing in terms of whatââ¬â¢s new is weââ¬â¢re starting to really be more intentional about how we integrate liberal arts into undergraduate business education [and] into the curriculum. Where weââ¬â¢ve called it integrated liberal arts before, I would say now itââ¬â¢s more kind of a comprehensive liberal arts integration where the curriculum that weââ¬â¢re developing is built around the framework of business concepts and how you might utilize this as a young manager. But, weââ¬â¢re drawing more explicitly on the other disciplines like psychology or like anthropology and looking at ethnography. So, whether or not weââ¬â¢re trying to understand our customers better or trying to understand ourselves as leaders and as someone who might have impact within society or within organizations, weââ¬â¢re really starting to be more explicit about that. And so, naturally, weââ¬â¢ve got new courses that are evolving out of it. So many of our courses are starting to take a different shape. And I think thatââ¬â¢s really exciting. Page 1 of 612345...à »Last à »
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