Employers 'cutting back' on employee tuition support
Business school is as expensive as ever, and companies nationwide are closing their pocketbooks.
Below are your search results. You can also try a Basic Search.
Business school is as expensive as ever, and companies nationwide are closing their pocketbooks.
Wharton sophomore Evan Reynolds believes he’s about to hit it big. And with his clients — two high-school hip-hop artists — performing in front of thousands of screaming fans every weekend, his prediction might not be far from the truth.
Next year, Penn will help change the lives of 50 students in India.
Lowering the temperature in Huntsman Hall by two degrees made Wharton $20,000 richer. And no one noticed.
For Masters of Business Administration graduates, the Wharton experience is not just two years long — it lasts forever.
Forget Huntsman Hall — Wharton students can now study in India, Israel and Brazil.
Nationally, the number of minority faculty in business schools is lagging behind, and the Wharton School is no exception to the trend.
In just a few hours, 10 Wharton freshmen enrolled in Management 100 created a video worth $10,000. The video, which promoted the nonprofit organization Givology, was selected as the winner of the Ford Focus Global Test Drive competition.
Wednesday night, Iranium — a documentary about Iran’s nuclear power program — premiered at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
At the Wharton School, iPads will continue to invade classrooms.
A $25,000 prize and a night with designer Diane von Furstenberg at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York sounds like a fantasy to most Penn students. This January, the dream became a reality for Wharton junior Tony Wang.
Recent trends in outsourcing have left Wharton students fearful of their job prospects after graduation.
Making a dollar isn’t the only goal for Wharton School students and faculty. Now, there is increased focus on what some call “greenomics” — the economics of being environmentally friendly.The Wharton Global Alumni Forum panel, titled “Creating New World Greenomics,” discussed these issues in May, and in light of the recent BP oil spill, Wharton has turned its attention toward environmentally conscious business practices.
Last week, the Wharton School began a groundbreaking initiative that will allow companies to accurately target customers based on past consumption patterns.
Amidst the recession, business has seen a shifting focus toward social entrepreneurship. A new curriculum and several programs at Wharton reflect this trend.
“Warlords.” “Piracy.” “Radical Islam.” These are the first words that came to students’ minds when professor Lee Cassanelli asked them about their impressions of Somalia at a lunch Tuesday sponsored by the History Undergraduate Advisory Board.
From her favorite Yiddish word — kibbitz — to her family history, Penn President Amy Gutmann discussed a wide range of topics in her “Fireside Chat” at Hillel.