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Smith's Students in
Free Enterprise (SIFE) Team Wins
Regional Competition
Twenty-six
undergraduate business students from the
Robert H. Smith School of Business
Students In Free Enterprise (SIFE-UMCP)
organization, a newly recognized student
organization on campus, recently earned
the title of Regional Champion. "In just
one semester, SIFE-UMCP has proven
itself to be a tremendously focused and
passionate team of students who have
worked very effectively together to
promote business learning and access to
business education both in our community
and on campus," says Patricia Cleveland,
assistant dean of undergraduate studies
at Smith.
SIFE, the global non-profit parent
organization, held its Washington, D.C.,
regional competition at the Crystal City
Marriott on Monday, March 29. Senior
Carolina Lasso, president and spearhead
of SIFE-UMCP, says that the purpose of
these competitions is "to motivate
students to complete projects and to
show business leaders what SIFE teams
are capable of doing."
The competition required student
teams to produce an annual report of the
semester's activities, as well as
deliver a 30-minute audiovisual
presentation to corporate executive
judges. Judges represented top national
and multinational companies, like
Unilever, American Greetings, CVS, Wyeth
Consumer Healthcare, Office Depot, and
Wells Fargo Financial. SIFE teams were
judged on a number of criteria that
evaluated how well each team grasped and
applied the concepts of business in a
free market economy, the challenges of
entrepreneurship, business ethics, and
social responsibility.
In addition to the competitive
portion of the regional competition,
students participated in a career fair
with the abovementioned company
sponsors. "In the career fair, many
companies want to recruit SIFE members,"
says Lasso, who had participated in one
other SIFE regional competition when she
attended Montgomery College's honors
program. The skills SIFE participants
develop - "leadership, organizational
skills, time management, partnering with
other organizations, and coordinating
activities" - appeal to these leading
companies, she says.
Indeed, the skills SIFE participants
have honed are valuable to running a
sustainable enterprise. Team SIFE-UMCP
balances the knowledge they gain in the
Smith classroom with secondary research
and hands-on experience. "In addition to
helping other people, we're broadening
our own knowledge, which helps in class
as well," Lasso explains. The themes
team members focus on in their classes
motivate them to select the projects
SIFE-UMCP undertakes. Some of last
semester's projects included developing
a marketing plan for a local tea shop,
delivering a 20-week program that
informs and assists local entrepreneurs
with their businesses, and teaching high
school students the importance of
financial management and investment.
This spring, SIFE-UMCP plans to teach
the employees of the dining services on
campus how to become financially
independent after retirement. They will
also work to teach high school students
basic investment and portfolio
management concepts using Smith's
top-notch Netcentricity Laboratory and
facilities in Van Munching Hall, home of
the Smith School. The team is expected
to excel again in May at the SIFE
National Competition in Kansas City,
Missouri.
SIFE is a global non-profit
organization that offers college and
university students the opportunity to
develop leadership, teamwork, and
communication skills through learning,
practicing and teaching the principles
of free enterprise. For more information
about the global SIFE organization,
visit http://www.sife.org.
The SIFE team at the University of
Maryland was established by a group of
enthusiastic business major students
with the support of Dr. Pat Cleveland,
assistant dean of undergraduate studies.
Currently, SIFE-UMCP is a Robert H.
Smith School of Business recognized
student organization and has a
membership of about 30 students both
from the College Park and Shady Grove
campuses. SIFE-UMCP is dedicated to
making a difference by teaching
important concepts through educational
outreach projects, including market
economics, entrepreneurship, personal
and financial success, and business
ethics to better ourselves, our
neighboring communities, and partnering
academic institutions. For more
information about Smith's SIFE student
organization, visit http://www.geocities.com/sifeumcp2003.
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