
Smith Undergrads Participate in Biz Quiz
A team of three students from the
Robert H. Smith School of Business at
the University of Maryland competed
against teams from the nation’s other
top 23 business programs at the third
annual Nationwide-Fisher Biz Quiz hosted
on the campus of the Fisher College of
Business at The Ohio State University on
Nov. 15, 2008. The final rounds were
held at WOSU public television’s
production studios at Columbus' Center
of Science and Industry (COSI) on Nov.
16.
The competition included individual
rounds, team preliminary rounds, team
semi-finals and the grand finale which
was moderated by the quiz master,
Krishnan Anantharaman, from The Wall
Street Journal. The teams were
tested on their current knowledge of all
topics appearing in The Wall Street
Journal, including the Weekend
Journal, six weeks prior to the
competition (articles published between
Oct. 1 - Nov. 12, 2008).
The Smith School team did not place in
the top three, but gave a stellar
performance. Team Smith was comprised of
Jeremy Erdman, a junior finance and
accounting major, Alison Willman, a
junior finance major, and Akshay Goyal,
a junior pursuing a double degree in
finance and accounting. On being asked
about how the team prepared for the
event, Erdman said, “The team split up
and took up sections from the
Journal to effectively prepare for
the competition. I read the "Business"
and "Personal Finance" sections, Alison
read the "Markets" section, and Akshay
read the main page and the "Opinion"
section, everyday.” The team met a few
times during the week to discuss the
articles, the economy, market trends
etc., amongst themselves and also with
their friends and family.
Each of the team members found the
experience of participating in the event
very invigorating. Willman said that she
found the opportunity and experience of
networking, developing a greater
understanding of current issues,
particularly financial and political
issues, at the event, very stimulating.
“I learned about current events. I also
learned that Mackerel is the currency of
American prisons,” she said. Erdman
shared similar sentiments and said,
“Meeting the people, the competitors
from top business schools, was a
fantastic experience.”
The event indeed was a memorable
learning experience for all the
participants and the team from Smith
admitted to becoming so addicted to
The Wall Street Journal that they
have decided to stick to the habit of
reading it every day and discussing the
articles and issues with friends and
classmates. The importance of keeping up
to date of the current economic events
and market trends through The Wall
street Journal has been reinforced
by one and all, time and again, and the
team understands that long term benefits
can be leveraged from reading the
publication regularly, especially by the
business students getting ready to take
on the challenges of the corporate
world.
Siddhartha Jain, MBA Candidate 2010,
Smith Media Group