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Students
as Partners
At Kellogg,
students participate as partners in driving change in the
curriculum. Reflecting this emphasis on student participation
in curriculum development, some of the school's most popular
classes were instituted or inspired by the students themselves.
The Global
Initiatives in Management course, for example, was
started in 1990 by a group of students who wanted to
study business
in what was then the Soviet Union. Since that time, each
year approximately 300 students have traveled to 15
countries,
exploring topics from ecotourism in Central America, to entry
strategies for Chinese markets.
Similarly,
the TechVenture
initiative began in 1998. In this course, students learn to
address current issues in technology and e-commerce, completing
the class with a visit to Silicon Valley. During the visit,
students meet with various business leaders and visionaries
and work on projects pertaining to the evolution of e-commerce
and its economic impact. This research is then compiled and
published every year in an anthology.
The Learning
through Experience and Action Program (or LEAP) was also
proposed by a student who wanted to obtain more hands-on experience
addressing business issues. The resulting course allows students
to help solve real-world management problems at client companies.
Another new class, Nonprofit Entrepreneurship, was proposed
by a group of Kellogg students last spring and is being introduced
into the curriculum this spring.
In addition,
students played a strong role in creating the Real Options
course, a class that expands understanding of valuation. After
completing an advanced finance class, the students demonstrated
a desire to learn even more and so approached the school's
administration with a plan to co-develop a new course to meet
their needs. Starting without benefit of a textbook or case
study, students committed their independent study hours to
working closely with Kellogg faculty to develop Real Options.
Because of this student interest and initiative, a course
that did not exist in December was ready to be added to the
curriculum by March.
Student
enthusiasm helps drive and shape many Kellogg course offerings,
even when the students themselves do not actually initiate
the idea for the class. One example of how this dynamism
impacts
the curriculum can be seen in Spreadsheet Modeling for Business
Decisions. This course focuses on setting up and analyzing
managerial decision problems on the spreadsheet platform,
addressing such elements as resource allocation, risk analysis,
decision analysis, data analysis and forecasting. Students
have embraced the class, in part, because the spreadsheet
format allows not only for a hands-on classroom experience,
but also enables students to learn mathematically advanced
material in an intuitive manner.
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