School Profile
Yale School of Management
School Overview
The mission of the Yale School of Management is educating leaders for business and society. The school's students, faculty, and alumni are committed to understanding the complex forces transforming global markets and using that understanding to build organizations--in the for-profit, nonprofit, entrepreneurial, and government sectors--that contribute lasting value to society. To learn more, please visit http://som.yale.edu/.
School History
In 1971 the University received a bequest from the estate of Frederick W. Beinecke, PhB 1909, for the creation of a program in management. Two years later, the Yale Corporation approved the creation of a School of Organization and Management, which would confer a master's degree in public and private management (MPPM). The first class arrived in the fall of 1976.
The new school offered a two-year program designed to train managers who could be effective in the business, government, and nonprofit sectors, and who would have the skills, understanding, and perspective to move among those sectors effectively. "Business and government are growing more interrelated," an early admissions catalog said, "requiring effective managers in each sector, public and private, to understand in depth the goals and operations of the other."
In 1994 the school changed its name to the Yale School of Management. In 1999 it began offering a master of business administration (MBA) degree, while maintaining its multi-sectoral focus.
In 2006 the school introduced an integrated core curriculum, designed to train leaders for the cross-functional environment of contemporary organizations. In multidisciplinary, team-taught core courses, students learn to draw on a broad range of information, tools, and skills to develop creative solutions and make strategic decisions.
In 2012 Yale SOM convened the Global Network for Advanced Management, a network of business schools from both developed and developing economies that act together to advance understanding of global business. In the same year, the school introduced the Master of Advanced Management program, a one-year program in advanced leadership and management for those who have earned or are earning an MBA or equivalent degree from a Global Network school.
In January 2014 the school will move into Edward P. Evans Hall, an entirely new campus designed to build on the school's strengths in innovation, curriculum, community, and global engagement.
Benefits
Yale University offers its faculty a comprehensive benefits package. For more details, please visit http://www.yale.edu/hronline/benefits/fac.html.
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