Smith's EMBA
Program Attracts Students from
Around the World
 |
|
Anil K.
Gupta, academic director of
the EMBA program. |
The Smith School is gearing up for
its third Executive MBA class, scheduled
to start on March 28, 2004. The deadline
for registration was Friday, March 12.
Applications for the 18-month, globally
focused program are accepted on a
rolling basis.
About the Smith EMBA
The Smith EMBA was established in
January 2003 and follows a quicker, more
intense track than many area EMBA
programs. In an increasingly competitive
market, the program has attracted
interest from candidates in the
mid-Atlantic region, throughout the
country, and around the world.
"Because time is the greatest
commodity for many senior executives,
EMBA applicants are looking for an
outstanding program that allows senior
staff to obtain an MBA in just 18
months. The Smith EMBA provides just
that," says Scott Koerwer, associate
dean for executive education and
marketing communications. "We continue
to receive feedback from our
partners-Washington-area businesses-that
participants in the Smith EMBA program
bring real value to their employers."
Anil K. Gupta, Ralph J. Tyser
Professor of Strategy and Organization
(pictured above), leads the faculty as
academic director of the EMBA program.
Participants are taught by the same 127
world-renowned faculty that teach the
highly ranked part-time and full-time
MBA programs.
Innovative Curriculum
The Smith EMBA program begins with
Smith's strong MBA core as the
foundation. These classes include
marketing strategy, corporate finance,
strategic management, and globalization.
The curriculum also includes four
critical mastery skills courses,
focusing on technology, communications,
ethics and corporate citizenship, and
leadership and creativity. As business
is no longer limited by geography, the
Smith curriculum encompasses
globalization and current world events
that affect the global economy.
Group work comprises approximately 20
percent of the Smith EMBA curriculum.
Each participant has the opportunity to
work as both part of a group and
one-to-one with a faculty advisor on a
company-specific opportunity or
challenge. The sponsoring company
immediately reaps the rewards of the
Action Learning Project.
Class size is limited to 35
participants to allow for in-depth
interaction between students and
faculty. Students develop strong
relationships with other senior
executives from a broad range of
industries and backgrounds. For example,
current EMBA participants represent
healthcare, government, pharmaceutical,
telecommunications, consumer products,
financial, engineering, and information
technology sectors.
EMBA China
As part of the Smith School's
strategy to build global alliances,
Smith created a strong presence in China
by establishing an EMBA program in
Beijing in January 2003. Designed to
meet the rapidly changing needs of the
world's business education marketplace,
Smith partnered with China's University
of International Business and Economics
(UIBE), under a new entity called the
Sino-U.S. School of International
Management (SIM). The Smith School is
one of a select group of U.S. business
schools to launch a successful
China-based EMBA program. The school
launched its second China EMBA program
this month.
Smith is looking for individuals who
want to learn-not be taught. To find out
if your experience, or if the experience
of a friend or colleague, would be a
good fit for the Smith EMBA, visit the
Office of Executive Education Web site
at http://ee.rhsmith.umd.edu or call
301.405.9559 for more information