Smith School
Undergraduate Curriculum Goes
International
 |
|
Five
members of the Smith School
faculty participated in a
two-week institute held at
UM, which offered professors
ways to integrate East Asia
into the curriculum. (l to
r) Sue White, Roxanne
Lefkoff, and Walter
Hutchens. |
Smith School professors are ready to
infuse undergraduate business courses
with a healthy dose of East Asia. Five
Smith professors were invited to
participate in a summer institute with
the goal of integrating East Asia into
their classes last month. The institute
was made possible by a generous
four-year grant from the Freeman
Foundation to develop undergraduate
curriculum in East Asian studies at the
University of Maryland, and is part of
an ongoing series of summer institutes.
Among five Smith School participants,
Walter Hutchens, assistant professor of
business law, was on one extreme end of
the spectrum in terms of previous Asia
experience. Hutchens has an M.A. in East
Asian Studies and practiced law in
Beijing, China, before joining the Smith
faculty. He is fluent in Mandarin
Chinese and recently published an
article on shareholder litigation in
China in the Penn. Journal of
International Economic Law.
"I benefited from additional exposure
to information about Korea and Japan,"
said Hutchens, "and I loved getting to
know some of my Smith School colleagues
better and brainstorming with them about
possible course offerings."
"Because of my research focus and
interests, I knew some of the other Asia
experts on campus before this program.
But interacting with my Smith School
colleagues was a real plus and Susan
White and I are now collaborating on a
course about comparative capital markets
which we expect to offer as a travel
course to Mainland China in January
2006," said Hutchens.
White, a teaching professor of
finance, is planning to incorporate some
of what she learned at the institute
into her required CORE finance course to
give her students more exposure to
international finance.
Calling the institute "very enriching
professional development," Roxanne
Lefkoff, teaching professor of marketing
and director of College Park Scholars
Program in Business, Society, and the
Economy, is also planning to incorporate
East Asia into her scholars and
marketing honors courses. Specifically,
she has a team project in mind - having
students investigate marketing
strategies for particular goods and
services by country to understand
similarities and differences between
countries and cultures.
The institute was an intensive
two-week program that started on June
14, 2004. Other participants were Hassan
Ibrahim, teaching professor of
information systems, and Brian Shaffer,
teaching professor of logistics and
associate director of College Park
Scholars Program in Business, Society,
and the Economy. "The Freeman Foundation
workshop on Asia was an exceptionally
rewarding educational experience and has
provided me with wealth of ideas on
incorporating Asia in my undergraduate
courses," said Ibrahim.