MIT Sloan School of Management
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Mission | To develop principled, innovative leaders who improve the world and to generate ideas that advance management practice. |
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Established | 1914 |
Official name | Alfred P. Sloan School of Management |
University | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
School type | Private |
Endowment | $541 million |
Dean | Richard L. Schmalensee |
Location | Cambridge, MA, USA |
Enrollment | 976 graduate, 263 undergraduate |
The MIT Sloan School of Management is one of the five schools of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. It is one of the world's leading business schools, conducting research and teaching in finance, entrepreneurship, marketing, strategic management, economics, organizational behavior, operations management, supply chain management, information technology, and many other fields.
MIT Sloan offers bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees, as well as non-degree executive education programs. Its largest program is the MBA program, which matriculates students every year from more than 60 countries, offers the widest range of electives,[1] and according to US News and BusinessWeek, is ranked #1 in more disciplines than any other business school in the United States.
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[edit] History
MIT Sloan began in 1914 as the engineering administration curriculum (or "Course XV" in the MIT parlance) in the MIT Department of Economics and Statistics. The scope and depth of this educational focus have grown steadily in response to advances in the theory and practice of management to today's broad-based management school. A program offering a master's degree in management was established in 1925. The world's first university-based executive education program - the Sloan Fellows - was created in 1931 under the sponsorship of Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., himself an 1895 MIT graduate, who was chairman of General Motors and has since been credited with creating the modern corporation. A Sloan Foundation grant established the MIT School of Industrial Management in 1952 with the charge of educating the "ideal manager", and the school was renamed in Sloan's honor as the Alfred P. Sloan School of Management. Since then, the school has grown to the point where management has become the second largest undergraduate major at MIT.
In the 1960s, the school played a leading role in the development of the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta. In 1990, the MIT Entrepreneurship Center was founded at MIT Sloan, one of the few business school entrepreneurship centers in the world focused on high tech. It sponsors both the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition as well as the popular and unique Entrepreneurship Lab and Global Entrepreneurship Lab courses, which sponsor MBA students to work on-site with start-ups throughout the world.
[edit] MBA
The main professional degree awarded at MIT Sloan, prior to 1995, was the SM in Management – an advanced professional degree combining the course requirements of the more widely-known MBA degree with a formal Master of Science dissertation. The completion of a dissertation was previously an Institute-wide requirement for all master's students. An exception was made for MIT Sloan students in 1995, and the school began awarding the MBA degree entirely on the basis of coursework. While some members of the MIT community felt that removing the dissertation requirement would reduce the educational merit of the degree [1], it was accepted since this was the practice at all other major business schools. MIT Sloan continues to offer the SM degree for students who choose to complete master's dissertations, but the vast majority of students now receive an MBA degree and do not write a dissertation. In practice, MIT Sloan's SM and MBA have always been viewed as equivalent in industry, although the SM is generally preferred as preparation for Ph.D. work.
This year (2006), MIT Sloan began experimenting with a new program for entrepreneurs within the MBA degree called E&I, or Entrepreneurship & Innovation Program. The E&I program centers on starting and evolving emerging technology enterprises. The program seeks to formalize MIT's long-standing and leading entrepreneurship offerings. E&I students benefit from a specialized weekly seminar for entrepreneurs. In addition, a one-week trip to Silicon Valley is coordinated in conjunction with the MIT Sloan MediaTech club.
Of the approximately 2,600 applications received last year for the MBA and Leaders for Manufacturing programs, about 500 were admitted and 372 matriculated [2].
[edit] Deans
- Erwin Schell, 1930-1951 (Head of the Department of Business and Engineering)
- Edward Pennell Brooks, 1951-1959
- Howard W. Johnson, 1959-1966
- William F. Pounds, 1966-1980
- Abraham J. Siegel, 1980-1987
- Lester Thurow, 1987-1993
- Glen L. Urban, 1993-1998
- Richard L. Schmalensee, 1998-present
[edit] Academics and student life
The MIT Sloan culture is similar to, but also distinct from, overall MIT culture, and is influenced most strongly by its MBA program. Most classes are taught in the Tang Center, although the school's live trading room is located in the basement of the original Alfred P. Sloan building. Courses are taught using both the case method as well as through lectures and team projects. The academic level of coursework is considered extremely rigorous by business school standards, with a greater emphasis on analytical reasoning and quantitative analysis than most top programs.
Academic rigor has a strong influence on the school's culture. The first semester, also known as the core, is the hardest of all semesters by design. In 2005, the students and faculty expressed solidarity against the core by wearing t-shirts that said "think outside the core." In 2006, the students placed their name-cards upside-down during the weeks where the workload was particularly demanding.
A staple of MIT Sloan life is the weekly C-Function, which stands alternately for "cultural function" or "consumption function". The school sponsors food and drink for all members of the MIT Sloan graduate community to enjoy entertainment organized by a specific campus cultural groups as well as parties with non-cultural themes. These functions are held every Thursday, often in the Walker Memorial building next to the school. MIT Sloan students and alumni are informally nicknamed Sloanies.
MIT Sloan benefits from its proximity to the world's best engineering and science programs as well as from integration with MIT's world-renowned Economics and Finance programs, all of which are often ranked #1 in world rankings. Many of the world's most influential thought-leaders in finance and economics (including Black, Scholes, Merton, Samuelson, Meyers and many more) and many of the most famous theories applied in business and on wall street (including Black-Scholes, System Dynamics, Operations Research, Quantitative Strategies, and many others) had their origins at MIT.
Students from both MIT and Harvard University frequently pursue simultaneous graduate degrees at the other respective institution, and many MIT Sloan students simultaneously complete degrees from Harvard Law School and the John F. Kennedy School of Government in particular. In addition, MIT Sloan offers its students the ability to freely cross-register for courses at Harvard Business School, one of the few pairs of leading business schools to have such an agreement. MIT Sloan also has an unofficial agreement with Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University to allow its students to cross-register and vice-versa. Fletcher remains the only other school in the Boston area, with Harvard being the other, that is allowed to do so because of Fletcher's internationally recognized and highly reputed international affairs program.
[edit] Programs and centers
MIT Sloan is home to a number of research centers, including the MIT Entrepreneurship Center, the Financial Engineering Lab, the MIT Center for Digital Business, the System Dynamics Group, the Operations Management Group, and the Center for Innovation in Product Development. It also publishes the peer-reviewed management journal MIT Sloan Management Review.
Unlike many business schools, MIT Sloan does not offer an Executive MBA program or a part-time MBA program. It does offer a number of other specialized degree programs, including:
- Leaders for Manufacturing (LFM) program is a dual-degree partnership program run by both MIT Sloan and the MIT School of Engineering that caters to students who are interested in manufacturing and operations careers. LFM students earn both an MBA (or SM in Management) from MIT Sloan as well as an SM in any participating engineering department at MIT, all within a 24 month timeframe. Currently, every engineering department except the Nuclear Engineering department participates in the LFM program.
- MIT Sloan Fellows Program in Innovation and Global Leadership is a management program that caters to students with significant managerial experience. Depending on the curricula they choose, students can earn either an MBA, an SM in Management, or a Master's degree in the Management of Technology (MOT) in either 1 or 2 years of full-time study. Over the years, as MIT Sloan Fellows wanted more entrepreneurship courses, and MOT students sought general management courses, the traditional MIT Sloan Fellows program was merged with the innovation-focused Management of Technology (MOT) program in 2004 to create its newly named larger program, the MIT Sloan Fellows Program in Innovation and Global Leadership.
- System Design and Management program is a joint program run by both MIT Sloan and the Engineering Systems Division of MIT, in which students are awarded a joint SM degree in Engineering and Management. Note that this is a single degree as opposed to the dual-degree that can be obtained through LFM. The SDM program can be completed either on a 13-month full-time basis, or through a 24-month part-time distance learning option.
- Biomedical Enterprise Program or BEP is a joint partnership program run by MIT Sloan and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology. Students can either complete the BEP program in conjunction with the regular MIT Sloan program or the MIT Sloan Fellows program and earn a SM degree in Health Sciences and Technology in addition to an MBA or SM in Management Science. The BEP also offers those who already hold a graduate degree in management the option of earning a 1-year SM degree in Health Sciences and Technology.
[edit] Prominent faculty
'Note: this list excludes faculty of other MIT schools (such as School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences) who do not hold joint appointments to Sloan'
Current faculty members include:
- Thomas J. Allen, inventor of the Allen Curve, co-author of "Lean Enterprise Value"
- Dan Ariely, leading expert on behavioral economics.
- Erik Brynjolfsson, leading expert on information technology productivity
- John C. Cox, inventor of binomial options model, author of "Options Markets"
- Michael A. Cusumano, author of "Competing on Internet Time"
- Kristin Forbes, youngest-ever member of U.S. Council of Economic Advisers
- Jay W. Forrester, founder of System Dynamics
- John R. Hauser, co-founder of marketing science
- Rebecca Henderson, leading expert on Technology Strategy
- S. P. Kothari, editor of the Journal of Accounting and Economics
- John Little, Institute Professor, founder of marketing science
- Thomas W. Malone, original Wired magazine columnist, author of "The Future of Work"
- Kenneth Morse, co-founder of 3Com and director of the MIT Entrepreneurship Center
- Stewart Myers, inventor of real option theory, author of "Principles of Corporate Finance"
- Edward B. Roberts, Founder and Chair of the MIT Entrepreneurship Center
- Stephen Ross, inventor of arbitrage pricing theory
- Edgar Schein, inventor of the term "corporate culture"
- Peter Senge, author of "The Fifth Discipline", Fortune Magazine top management guru
- John Sterman, leading expert on System Dynamics
Former faculty members include:
- Richard Beckhard, pioneer in the field of Organizational Development
- Warren Bennis, leading expert on Leadership, author of "Leaders"
- Fischer Black, co-inventor, Black-Scholes option pricing model
- Rudi Dornbusch, author of "Macroeconomics"
- Michael Hammer, creator of Business process reengineering theory
- Jerry A. Hausman, economist, 1985 John Bates Clark Medal recipient
- Douglas McGregor, inventor of "Theory X and theory Y"
- Robert C. Merton, 1997 Nobel Laureate in Economics
- Franco Modigliani, 1985 Nobel Laureate in Economics
- Paul Samuelson, first American Nobel Laureate in Economics, 1970
- Myron S. Scholes, 1997 Nobel Laureate in Economics
- George P. Shultz, former US Secretary of State
- Robert Solow, 1987 Nobel Laureate in Economics
- Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric, Fortune "Manager of the Century"
[edit] Notable alumni
- F. Duane Ackerman, former Chairman & CEO, BellSouth
- Thad W. Allen, Commandant, United States Coast Guard, former director of FEMA
- Kofi Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations, Nobel Peace Prize recipient
- Eric Beinhocker, author, "The Origin of Wealth"
- W. Frank Blount, former CEO, Telstra Corporation Limited
- Daniel Carp, Chairman & CEO, Eastman Kodak Company
- Colby Chandler, former Chairman & CEO, Eastman Kodak
- William Clay Ford, Jr., Chairman & former CEO, Ford Motor Company
- Philip M. Condit, former Chairman & CEO, The Boeing Company
- Daniel DiLorenzo, founder, BioNeuronics Corporation, winner of Lemelson-MIT Prize
- Carly Fiorina, former Chairman & CEO, Hewlett Packard; #1 "Most Powerful Woman in Business", 1998-2003, Fortune Magazine
- James C. Foster, Chairman & CEO, Charles River Laboratories, Inc.
- Thomas P. Gerrity, former dean, Wharton School
- Sumantra Ghoshal, founding dean, Indian School of Business
- Adi Godrej, Chairman, Godrej Group
- Bruce S. Gordon, President & CEO, NAACP
- Robert Hamada, former dean, University of Chicago Graduate School of Business
- Justin Jaschke, CEO, Verio
- Clay Johnson III, Deputy Director for Management, White House Office of Management and Budget
- Harvey E. Johnson, Jr., Vice Admiral, United States Coast Guard
- Michael Kaiser, President, John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
- Mitch Kapor, founder, Lotus Development, inventor of Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet
- Rob Ketterson, Managing Partner, Fidelity Ventures
- John Kotter, Harvard University professor, BusinessWeek "#1 top leadership guru", 2001
- Judy Lewent, CFO, Merck
- Nabiel Makarim, Minister of the Environment of Indonesia
- David McClain, President of the University of Hawaii System
- Dennis Meadows, author "Limits to Growth"
- D.R. Mehta, former chairman, Securities and Exchange Board of India
- Lorenzo Mendoza, Chairman, Empresas Polar
- Victor Menezes, Chairman, Clearing House Association
- Robert Metcalfe, founder, 3Com, inventor of Ethernet and Metcalfe's Law
- Henry Mintzberg, McGill University professor, Fortune Magazine top management guru
- Daryl Morey, GM (starting in 2007) of the Houston Rockets
- Alan Mulally, President & CEO, Ford Motor Company
- Joseph Nacchio, Chairman & CEO, Qwest
- Preetish Nijhawan, co-founder, Akamai Technologies
- Benjamin Netanyahu, former Prime Minister of Israel
- Randal Pinkett, winner of The Apprentice 4
- Calie Pistorius, Principal, University of Pretoria
- William A. Porter, founder, E*Trade
- Tony Purnell, principal, Jaguar Racing
- John E. Potter, United States Postmaster General
- Subramaniam Ramadorai, CEO, Tata Consultancy Services
- John S. Reed, former Chairman & CEO, Citigroup; former Chairman, New York Stock Exchange
- Fritz Roethlisberger, social scientist and conductor of the Hawthorne experiments
- Jaime Rosenthal, former Vice-President of Honduras, congressman
- Kenan Sahin, founder & CEO, Kenan Systems
- Martha Samuelson, CEO, Analysis Group
- Gerhard Schulmeyer, former CEO, Siemens AG
- Saul Shapiro, Vice President, New York City Economic Development Corporation
- Jeff Stibel, CEO, Web.com
- Robert A. Swanson, founder of Genentech
- Keiji Tachikawa, CEO, NTT DoCoMo
- Bill Taylor, co-founder, Fast Company
- Robert Thirsk, astronaut, NASA
- John W. Thompson, Chairman & CEO, Symantec
- Ronald L. Turner, CEO, Ceridian Corporation
- Milen Velchev, former finance minister of Bulgaria
- Ron Williams, CEO, Aetna
- Oliver E. Williamson, noted economist
- Thornton Wilson, former Chairman & CEO, The Boeing Company
- Robert Varkonyi, 2002 World Series of Poker champion
- Carl Yankowski, former CEO, Palm Computing
[edit] Undergraduate Rankings
[edit] MBA Rankings
- #7 BusinessWeek, 2006 [9]
- #13 (US), #18 (International) Economist Intelligence Unit, 2006 [10]
- #9 (US), #14 (International) Financial Times, 2007 [11]
- #5 Princeton Review Selectivity rating, 2006 [12]
- #3 for Overall Academic Experience [13]
- #4 U.S. News & World Report, 2007 [14]
- #1 for Information Systems
- #1 for Operations
- #1 for Supply Chain / Logistics
- #6 for Finance
- #5 for Entrepreneurship
- #10 The Wall Street Journal, 2006 [15]
- #1 for Information Technology
- #2 for Operations Management
- #5 for Entrepreneurship
- #8 for Finance
- #10 for Strategy
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ BusinessWeek's MBA Report, 2004. Business schools with most electives are MIT Sloan (200), Kellogg (194), Wharton (185), Chicago (150), Columbia (131), Stanford (96), and Harvard (87).
[edit] External links
- MIT Sloan School of Management website
- MIT OpenCourseWare: MIT Sloan School of Management
- MIT Sloan Fellows Program in Innovation and Global Leadership
- System Design and Management (SDM)
- MIT Leaders for Manufacturing Program (LFM)
- Satellite image from WikiMapia, Google Maps or Windows Live Local
- Street map from MapQuest or Google Maps
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image from TerraServer-USA
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