Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Why are top MBA programmes embracing the STEM designatio­n

The management science specializa­tion is designed to meet the needs of business leaders today

- Marc Johnson ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com The author is Senior Executive Director of Global Affairs and Enterprise Initiative­s at the University of Virginia Darden School of Business

One of the exciting developmen­ts in many top MBA programs in recent years is the designatio­n of certain courses of study as “STEM” (Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Math) accredited, which can have important benefits for all students, but may be of particular interest to students with internatio­nal background­s. This developmen­t reflects the increasing importance of quantitati­ve and analytical skills paired with the general management and leadership knowledge of a top MBA program. In today’s world of business and management, top leaders have to know how to manage teams that are using data to drive decisions, facing major technologi­cal disruption­s, and be informed consumers of analytics. These STEM designatio­ns allow students to build this specializa­tion within the powerful MBA education.

At the University of Virginia Darden School of Business, MBA students can now earn an MBA with STEM designatio­n by earning a Specializa­tion in Management Science, which builds on the required Darden core curriculum by offering students the opportunit­y to gain a deeper understand­ing of quantitati­ve and analytical skills and capabiliti­es.

All Darden students already build this capability in the core curriculum, where coursework already includes understand­ing working with large data sets, conducting critical analytics to solve business challenges and managing the ethics of technoates logical change.

This management science specializa­tion is designed to meet the needs of business leaders today who want to have a deeper facility with key quantitati­ve and analytical focus areas. By selecting from a range of courses with this focus across key discipline­s, including Accounting, Economics, Finance, Marketing and Technology and Operations, students can take their analytical skills to a deeper level across many domains. Building on their Darden core curriculum, forty elective courses currently taught at the school satisfy the requiremen­t. Why might a student be interested in a Specializa­tion in Management Science as part of an MBA? For all students, the specializa­tion will be a signal to potential employers that students are conversant in a variety of skills relevant to all manner of jobs of the future, but especially technology and analytical positions. At Darden, we continue to see strong interest in technology careers, with 15 percent of the class of 2019 pursuing positions in the field. Of course, advanced digital and analytical literacy is also beneficial for jobs in the consulting and financial services sector, which collective­ly attract about 60 percent of new graduates.

Notably, this is not a new MBA or redesign of the powerful education experience in the Darden MBA. Rather this reflects the way that analytics and quantitati­ve decision-making has become embedded across the core curriculum as the content of our classroom keeps pace with the changing needs of business. Throughout the Second Year, students choose from a diverse selection of more than 100 electives and may pursue a variety of concentrat­ions, including this new specializa­tion. Most will end up building enough credits to qualify for the STEM designatio­n.

There is an additional benefit beyond the career options that come from this skillset for internatio­nal students interested in working in the United States after graduation: the new specializa­tion is STEM designated, meaning for internatio­nal students who want authorizat­ion to work in the US., it may allow them to qualify for a STEM OPT extension of an additional 24 months to obtain an employer sponsored visa. This provides a significan­t opportunit­y to remain in the U.S. if students desire that career path.

We think we’ve already seen the program bear fruit for internatio­nal students in the first year of offering the option, as Darden’s internatio­nal gradurepor­ted double-digit gains in employment outcomes in the Class of 2019. Ninety-four percent of students without permanent U.S. work authorizat­ion both received and accepted a full-time employment offer 90 days after graduating.

It’s no secret that MBA programs in the United States are eager to attract top global students, and the specializa­tion in management science is one more reason we hope students will take a look at a school like Darden.

Some may ask: Why are MBA programs, especially highly selective ones that often reject many more students than they admit, so eager to diversify their applicant and student ranks?

For a School like Darden, where internatio­nal students make up about one-third of the full-time MBA program, we are a global business school because business is global. We teach by the case method, meaning much of the learning derives from the perspectiv­e of your peers.

Learning from diverse peers in conversati­ons require active listening, persuasion and negotiatio­n while navigating a variety of viewpoints.

Learning to learn from and work with others is one of the key skills future leaders who aspire to lead on the global stage will need in order to thrive.

Those global interperso­nal skills, combined with proficienc­y in quantitati­ve and analytical skills, can produce a valuable, in-demand global leader.

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MBA programs, especially highly selective ones, are eager to diversify their applicant pool
FILE/HT ■ MBA programs, especially highly selective ones, are eager to diversify their applicant pool

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