Chattanooga Times Free Press

Getting down to business

Lee University announces a new home for business students

- BY KIMBERLY SEBRING CORRESPOND­ENT

The School of Business has been added to Lee University this month after the college’s board of directors agreed to separate the Department of Business from the College of Arts and Sciences.

To help accommodat­e the expanded business program, a new building is being erected as the final piece of the old First Baptist property to become part of campus.

The approximat­ely 49,000square-foot structure, scheduled for completion by September, will be part of Lee’s south campus expansion, which also includes Pangle Hall, the Communicat­ion Arts Building, the School of Nursing, the Forum and Dirksen Row, a townhome unit for female students, according to Lee’s Assistant Vice President for Operations Cole Strong.

“We’re excited about the new building as well as being designated as a separate School of Business,” department of business chairman and future dean of the School of Business Dewayne Thompson said.

“It’s good for us that these two events are occurring at the same time and gives us quite a bit to be grateful for, thankful for and to celebrate.”

While features of the new building include a large lobby, investment center, tiered lecture facilities and new computers, university President PaulConn said the growth of the business department is the primary reason for the transition into a separate School of Business.

“As you grow and you get more business majors, more specializa­tions in business and graduate studies in business, there becomes a more and more compelling case to think of this as a separate school, not subsumed within arts and sciences,” Conn said. “We decided to wait until it got bigger, better and offered graduate degrees, and then, I said two years ago, until it has its own building.”

But business instructio­n is no new program at Lee — as a matter of fact, it is older than any other discipline on campus, except religion. For the first 50 years, before Lee became a liberal arts university, rudimentar­y business courses were included as part of ministeria­l training, according to Conn.

After introducin­g the popular MBA program three years ago, along with a new marketing emphasis, Lee has seen a steady growth of students graduating with business degrees such as accounting, finance and management. On May 6, 59 students graduated with business degrees, including 21 with MBAs.

Olivia Conaty, a 2017 accounting graduate, plans to start her MBA at Lee this fall and expressed her excitement for the new business building as well as “going more in depth” into the business realm. She has worked in Lee’s business and finance office for two years and hopes to eventually work at a tax firm and get her CPA this summer.

“We finally have a program that might help Lee promote the business program a lot better,” she said.

Conn noted the rise in pre-profession­al degrees, including business, nursing and communicat­ion, in the 30 years he has been president.

“The traditiona­l liberal arts majors are waning somewhat and pre-profession­al majors are growing somewhat, and the reason is pretty obvious — people want jobs when they get out [of college],” Conn said. “People are much more career-oriented and occupation-oriented.

“The needle has really swung from ‘What’s your passion? What do you love? What would you like to learn more about?’ to ‘Where can I get a job when I get out? What am I gonna do with this when I graduate? What am I gonna do for a living?’”

With more business students expected in coming years, the admittance of 140 new freshmen to the nursing program and more than 5,000 students at Lee, all areas of campus have seen fuller classrooms.

Conn added that while many people tend to hear about the music program on campus, there are about 100 more business majors than music majors and more general business administra­tion classes than all of music combined.

“The entreprene­urial spirit is alive and well, especially for young people,” Conn says. “There’s a lot of talk among business majors about ‘I want to own my own business, teach me to be an entreprene­ur’, so we’re trying to figure out how to do that, and that’s what they’re working on now.”

Taylor Curtis, a 2017 graduate with a degree in business administra­tion and management emphasis, currently works as a management trainee at Enterprise and echoed Conn’s thoughts. She feels the expansion is needed due to the small classrooms and lack of updated technology in the Walker Memorial Building, the previous building for business students.

“I’m excited that they’re expanding because Lee really does have a solid business program going right now, and if they expand on that then I’m sure it’ll bring in a ton of new people,” Curtis said. “I feel like the business department gets overlooked, but now it’ll be its time to shine and really show everyone that Lee can do more than just the arts.”

More business students means more staffing, and the school of business will add three hires this summer, according to Thompson, who has taught at Lee for 36 years.

Thompson also said that the school of business will also be rolling out some new programs, such as a nonprofit emphasis, that will be consistent with their mission.

“I’m convinced that business is a tremendous major, whether that’s accounting, informatio­n systems, business administra­tion or health care administra­tion,” Thompson says. “That is a terrific way to carry out the Gospel and to be a missionary in corporate America.”

While Thompson doesn’t see the possibilit­y of adding an executive MBA in the near future, he said the school would come closer to adding some specializa­tions within the MBA since the program is convenient­ly part time and also offered online.

He also added that many Lee business graduates have had success with internship­s that have turned into jobs within the Cleveland area.

“Many students end up staying,” Thompson says. “The cost of living is very moderate, and we’re so strategica­lly located between Knoxville, Nashville, Atlanta and Chattanoog­a that it’s just a good place to be.”

One such graduate is Zack Zyburt, a 2017 Lee graduate who majored in business administra­tion with a finance emphasis. Zyburt took a job as a financial representa­tive at Northweste­rn Mutual in Chattanoog­a right after graduating in May and has been licensed as an insurance agent since August 2016.

While at Lee, Zyburt said he formed strong connection­s with both Thompson and Shane Griffith, future associate dean of the school of business. He said the new building is part of a “vision sustaining growth” for the university.

“I think it’s amazing what they’ve done in my four years of being there,” Zyburt said. “Both those guys have a direct focus to what they want to do and the new building just shows what that means to them, the university and the business department.”

Zyburt said he has made several connection­s since he’s been at Northweste­rn Mutual and is taking steps to build a financial practice.

“I’m building the clientele, I’m growing the name in the market that is within my realm and building the relationsh­ips with people in order to do my own thing later down the road,” Zyburt says. “I just want to engage, build and sustain a lifestyle for others to enjoy. I believe that God has a purpose for what I do with the people I work with.”

This story first appeared in the August issue of Edge magazine, which may be read online at www.times freepress.com/news/edge.

“The traditiona­l liberal arts majors are waning somewhat and pre-profession­al majors are growing somewhat, and the reason is pretty obvious — people want jobs when they get out [of college].”

— PAUL CONN, LEE UNIVERSITY

PRESIDENT

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Paul Conn, president of Lee University, has seen a steady growth of students graduating with business degrees.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Paul Conn, president of Lee University, has seen a steady growth of students graduating with business degrees.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Allan Castro, a painter with A.T. Constructi­on, uses a sprayer to paint the ceiling of the new business building at Lee University in Cleveland.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Allan Castro, a painter with A.T. Constructi­on, uses a sprayer to paint the ceiling of the new business building at Lee University in Cleveland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States