SOM leads in enrollment of women MBA
students
With women making up 38 percent of the
Class of 2008, the School of Management has the highest percentage of women MBA
students enrolled for 2006 among leading business schools, according to a
census released in October by the Forte Foundation. SOM dean Joel Podolny
called it a "wonderful affirmation" of the school's efforts to recruit women,
and added, "This is a banner time for the women leaders of SOM, both past and
present" -- referring also to Fortune magazine's recent naming of Indra Nooyi ’80MBA as
the most powerful woman in business. The Forte Foundation is a consortium of
top U.S. and European business schools, major corporations, and nonprofits,
that is dedicated to encouraging women to pursue leadership roles in business.
It conducted the census of female enrollment among its 27 member schools, which
include Harvard Business School, Wharton, Columbia, Chicago, MIT, and Tuck.
Students take off in new curriculum
As first-year students embarked on
the Organizational Perspectives courses, a series of eight all-new classes that
forms the heart of the new Yale SOM MBA curriculum, they were also preparing
for another embarkation. In January 2007 first-year students are traveling to
one of eight destinations around the world. Yale SOM is the first major
business school to require such an international trip. Faculty leaders designed
the trips to examine key issues in international business, and students will
meet with businesspeople, government officials, and nonprofit leaders. Each
trip will also link to one or more of the Organizational Perspective courses
through pre-trip preparation and through reports and activities conducted in
the classes after students return. The trips will go to India, China,
Singapore, South Africa, Costa Rica, and Poland, among other destinations. See
mba.yale.edu/internationalexperience for a complete list of trips.
Center renamed in honor of Ira
Millstein
The school has renamed its new
corporate governance center the Millstein Center for Corporate Governance and
Performance at the Yale School of Management, in honor of corporate governance
expert Ira M. Millstein. Millstein, a senior partner at the international law
firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges, is also senior associate dean for corporate
governance at Yale SOM.
Considered one of the world's
leading experts on corporate governance, Millstein was integral in the launch
of the center, serving as its director through the inaugural Yale Governance
Forum in June 2006, and he continues to oversee the center in his role as
senior associate dean.
The center was established with the
receipt of $20 million in gifts and commitments from individual and corporate
donors. The mission of the center is to explore the role of corporate
governance to better enable corporations both to be competitive in their
markets and to contribute to society. "Ira Millstein's reputation in the field
of corporate governance is unmatched," said Dean Joel Podolny. "He has brought
tremendous innovation and real-world insight to the center and it has
flourished under his leadership." Read more about the center online at
millstein.som.yale.edu.