Kellogg
welcomes MBA Class of 2009
Pre-Term initiates students to Kellogg life, academics
By
Adrienne Murrill
Sept.
4, 2007 – Mission possible.
That was
the message at the welcome address for Complete Immersion
in Management (CIM), a Pre-Term orientation program for incoming
full-time MBA students at the Kellogg School. CIM, which began
in 1969, includes several days of team-building activities,
speakers and social events organized by second-year students
for the new class. It also includes the students’ first
intensive core academic course in leadership.
“Your
mission – and you must choose to accept it – is
to throw yourself passionately into everything you do,”
said John Thorpe ’08, the master of ceremonies for this
year’s program. Dressed in a tuxedo, Thorpe welcomed
the more than 600 students who gathered in the Owen L. Coon
Forum Sept. 4. His lively and humorous introduction was the
kick off to a formal welcome from the Office of the Dean.
Dean Dipak
C. Jain addressed the students, stating that his mission was
to share “how everyone can work together to take the
institution to greater heights.” After briefly explaining
his progression to the position he has held since 2001, Jain
introduced the three senior associate deans and their roles
at Kellogg. He also presented the platforms of the Kellogg
brand: intellectual depth, experiential learning, global perspective,
and leadership and social responsibility. These are bound
together by what Jain said is the school’s most distinctive
feature, a culture of innovation and collaboration.
“Kellogg
takes a holistic approach to management education,”
he said. “You will find in your two years here these
four platforms emphasized at the heart of the Kellogg curriculum.
We try to make sure that when you graduate, you are well prepared.”
Part of
that preparation, he continued, will come from teamwork, for
which the school is recognized. “You are going to learn
from us, but also from each other. You have a responsibility
to your group members to help them, to share with them your
experience, your expertise, and also to be open to learning
from them.”
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David
Besanko, senior associate dean: planning and external
relations |
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Sunil
Chopra, senior associate dean: curriculum and teaching |
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Kathleen
Hagerty, senior associate dean: faculty and research |
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All
photos © Nathan Mandell |
Senior associate
deans Kathleen Hagerty, Sunil Chopra and David Besanko also
addressed the class, expanding on each of the school’s
platforms. “Academics is at the heart of Kellogg,”
Hagerty said, pointing out examples such as Kellogg Insight,
the school’s new online research portal, and the many
text books authored by the school’s faculty past and present.
“Learning is an active experience,” Chopra said,
building upon Hagerty’s comments. “In this classroom,
between 600 of you, there is more than 3,000 years of work experience.
Think of how much knowledge resides in this room. You must bring
that to bat in everything you do, in every group you’re
part of, in every class you participate in.”
Besanko
touched on the Kellogg School’s past and present culture
of innovation and collaboration, naming examples such as the
JD-MBA joint degree and the new global requirement for students.
“The culture of teamwork that you will experience as
students is very much mirrored in the culture of teamwork
among administrators and faculty.” He encouraged the
incoming students to take full advantage of this time to engage
in collaboration where possible.
This sentiment
was echoed by the welcome from the Kellogg Student Association’s
president, Zoravar Dhaliwal ’08. “This is an unparalleled
opportunity to test our limits and see what we’re truly
capable of,” he said. “Kellogg is a safe environment
to leave your comfort zone and to take chances doing all the
things you wanted to do but never had the opportunity to.”
One of the reasons this is possible, he said, is because of
the student cooperation with the deans, faculty and administration.
“The administration is interested in partnering with
the students and helping us get the most out of our time here.”
The new
students will take the next two weeks to get to know their
section mates, a group of about 70 students with whom they
will take most of their first-quarter classes, meet the Kellogg
School’s professors and become acquainted with the campus
and community.
Pre-Term
includes an intensive introduction to academics at the Kellogg
School with an offering from the Management and Organizations
Department called Leadership in Organizations. The academic
portion begins Sept. 7. Other CIM activities will include
a diversity workshop and a community service day.
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