Michigan State University - Eli Broad
Michigan State University - Eli Broad
Michigan State University - Eli Broad
Additionally, the Broad College of Business and Graduate School of Management partners with a variety of organizations that promote minorities and
women in business careers. Michigan State University is affiliated with:
350
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
Please describe any scholarship and/or fellowship opportunities for minority and/or female students attending your school.
Name of scholarship program: AICPA Minority Scholarship
Deadline for application: March 6th
Scholarship award amount: Varies; $3,000 to $5,000
Website or other contact information: www.aicpa.org
This program provides awards to outstanding minority students who demonstrate exceptional academic achievement, leadership and commitment to
pursuing the CPA designation. Eligible candidates must be enrolled as a full-time graduate student (nine semester hours or equivalent) unless
completing his or her final semester of study, and have at least a 3.3 GPA. Applicants must be students of Black or African-American, Hispanic or
Latino, Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander descent or of two or more races, and be U.S. citizens or permanent
residents (green card holders).
From the NSHMBA website, “The National Society of Hispanic MBAs, which exists ‘to foster Hispanic leadership through graduate management
education and professional development,’ has established a scholarship program to assist qualified Hispanics to pursue MBAs. Scholarships are
offered each year for full- and part-time study at an accredited (AACSB) institution of the student’s choice.”
From the NBMBAA website, “The NBMBAA MBA Scholarship Program identifies students who have demonstrated potential to make significant
contributions in the field of business in the public and private sectors. Applicants must demonstrate academic excellence, exceptional leadership
potential and be actively involved in their local communities through service to others.
“Each year a minimum of 25 students receive scholarship awards up to $15,000 and NBMBAA membership. Some recipients will also receive round-
trip airfare and housing to the annual conference and exposition, complimentary conference registration and special VIP access to receptions and
events at the conference.”
PROMINENT ALUMNI/FACULTY
Please provide information about prominent minority faculty members at your school.
Matthew J. Anderson, associate professor of accounting and information systems
Professor Matthew J. Anderson received his PhD and MBA in accounting from Michigan State University. He was a member of the faculty at the
University of Minnesota for several years before returning to Michigan State University. His teaching emphasis is in the financial area, and he has
taught at the doctoral, master’s and undergraduate levels. His research is concerned with the use of accounting information in firm valuation at the
individual level, and with the interface between individual and market-level decisions in economic settings. He is an active member of the American
Accounting Association (AAA), and has served as an at-large member of council, and as a member of the Research Advisory Committee and the
Minority Faculty Development Committee.
Professor Anderson has also served on the Trueblood Committee and chaired the Competitive Manuscript Committee. Additionally, he has served as
Midwest representative for the financial reporting section, overseeing financial papers submitted for the Midwest meeting. He has served on the
editorial boards of the Accounting Review and Issues in Accounting Education. He has published in the Accounting Review, the Journal of Accounting
Research, Accounting, Organizations and Society and Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, among others. He has also served as
director of the doctoral program at Michigan State University. He is a dyed-in-the-wool, unabashed Michigan State Spartan.
351
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
Tunga currently teaches the data analysis and business forecasting class for the full-time MBA students at Michigan State University. His previous
teaching experience includes classes at undergraduate, full-time MBA and weekend MBA levels on a variety of topics such as international business,
international marketing, managerial marketing, business statistics and entrepreneurship. Tunga is a member of the Academy of International Business
(AIB), the Academy of Management (AOM) and NASBITE International.
In 2000, he was recognized by BusinessWeek as favorite faculty member. His class, Corporate Financial Strategies, was commended as the “most
favorite course” by the same publication. In the previous year, he was awarded Spartan Business Journal Award for Excellence. His research interests
and areas of expertise include mergers and acquisitions, product market competition, price bubbles, optimal contracting, insider trading and boards
of directors.
Please provide information about prominent minority alumni from your school.
Toichi Takenaka, MBA 1968, president and chief executive officer, Takenaka Corporation
One of Forbes magazine’s Richest People, Toichi Takenaka is the chief executive of Takenaka Corporation, the largest architecture, engineering and
construction firm in Japan.
Please provide information about prominent female faculty members at your school.
Maureen O. Hall, director of academic and program services for the full-time MBA program
Maureen Hall received her BA and MA from Georgetown University. She has been in higher education for over 20 years. She began her career at the
University of Michigan business school. She moved to Washington, D.C., where she most recently served as assistant dean of undergraduate business
and assistant dean of MBA student services at Georgetown University. Ms. Hall previously served on the board for the Graduate Business Student
Services Association and on the conference committee for the Graduate Management Admission Council.
352
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
and Organizational Psychology. In 1995, she received the Outstanding Publication in Organizational Behavior award presented by the Academy of
Management’s OB division.
Zsuzsanna Fluck, associate professor of finance and director of the Center for Venture Capital, Private Equity and Entrepreneurial Finance
Zsuzsanna Fluck has been at the Eli Broad College of Business since 2001. She received her MA and PhD in economics from Princeton University,
and has over 15 years of teaching experience at New York University’s Stern School of Business, the Saïd Business School at the University of Oxford
and the University of Vienna. Professor Fluck has been a William Davidson Institute Research Fellow since 2003. Her areas of expertise include
financial contracting, security design, mergers and acquisitions, corporate restructuring, corporate governance, venture capital and private equity. She
has published in multiple scholarly journals, including Journal of Business, Journal of Banking and Finance and Annals of Finance.
Sharon Wicker, MBA 1984, senior vice president of commercialization and chief strategy officer, Senomyx
Sharon Wicker has been the senior vice president of commercialization and chief strategy officer for Senomyx since 2006. Prior to her current position,
she accumulated over 15 years of food industry expertise. Most recently, Ms. Wicker served as president of the flavor business unit at the A.M. Todd
Company. She also served as the vice president of meals for the frozen foods division of H.J. Heinz Company and as vice president of new business
development for Heinz North America where she developed and implemented global strategy for the newly formed organic and natural foods category.
In addition, Ms. Wicker served in a number of leadership roles at ConAgra Grocery Products, including vice president of the meals business unit where
she initiated a supply chain cost-reduction task force that generated $3 million in annual savings. ConAgra’s Hunt’s Foods business unit achieved
double-digit profit growth under Ms. Wicker’s leadership, resulting in her receiving ConAgra’s Kennedy Award for Marketing Excellence. More recently,
she has also served as industry consultant for the consumer goods industry.
Bibi Kaminski, MBA 1998, senior product manager, Hormel Foods International Corporation
Ms. Kaminski has worked for Hormel Foods Corporation since graduation in many different capacities and is currently in charge of all Hormel branded
retail marketing in the greater China market.
Please describe any faculty and/or student research projects that focus on diversity, multiculturalism and minority issues.
Anne Levy, associate professor of law and ethics, focuses her research on gender issues in the workplace, particularly sexual harassment. She has
served on the women’s advisory committee to the provost as well as teaching several classes on ethics in the workplace. Additionally, Professor Levy
has served as a consultant and expert witness in a variety of sexual harassment lawsuits and grievances.
353
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
Associate Professor Matthew Anderson conducts research on minority student performance in accounting settings. He is currently working on a paper
assessing the equality of opportunity programs in business settings. He has addressed minority issues in a variety of presentations, lectures and
published work, including:
“An Assessment of Efforts to Retain Minority Students in Accounting and Business Programs,” Equity & Excellence in Education, (1996):
Co-author(s): H. Sollenberger and E. Betts.
354
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
Please also provide information on any programs, including on-campus and universitywide programs in which MBA students participate that focus on
issues related to women or minorities.
The Black History Month Multicultural Heroes Hall of Fame Case Competition
Our goal is to create an educational program that honors heroes from various cultures who epitomize Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream of a nation
where “… his children will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” We have developed an educational case
competition that focuses on improving student knowledge of Black History Month and multicultural leaders who have had a significant impact on the
world. This program will also help promote diversity and multiculturalism. It will help develop professional presentation skills, case competition skills
for undergraduates and promote a sense of cultural efficacy for all people.
Please provide information on any institutes and/or related programs that focus on diversity.
The office for inclusion and intercultural initiatives
The office for inclusion and intercultural initiatives serves as an executive level focal point for the promotion of inclusion across the university. The
office strengthens and creates a supportive university environment for MSU students, staff and faculty that fosters full participation and cultivates
excellence through inclusion, diversity, institutional equity and intercultural understanding. The office monitors the university’s compliance with state
and federal laws and encourages best practices available to promote a culture of inclusion. We encourage MSU units to share information and
successful efforts that realize the university’s mission and vision. This is accomplished through programming, educational/development opportunities,
support for other campus inclusion/diversity resources, community building, ensuring institutional equity and the cultivation of research and
assessment regarding inclusion. Through these initiatives this office leverages change to build a more inclusive and supportive campus community
which values our diverse cultures.
Please describe any off-campus resources, activities, programs and/or organizations that may be of interest to minority or female students.
Michigan Women’s Historical Center and Hall of Fame
www.michiganwomenshalloffame.org
According to its website, the Michigan Women’s Historical Center and Hall of Fame is a nonprofit corporation that “offers exhibits which celebrate the
achievements and history of Michigan women, including members of the Michigan Women’s Hall of Fame. Additionally, the center contains an art
gallery with changing exhibits displaying the work of outstanding Michigan women artists.”
355
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
Please describe any diversity recruiting events for employers recruiting minority and/or female students at or near your school.
Students have access to the MBA career services office, which brings top global firms to campus and provides introductions to alumni, potential
mentors and other MBAs who will help you grow your network, as well as the Lear Career Services Center, and the MSU career services network.
DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
Please describe the demographics of your most recent entering class.
Percentage of female students: 22 percent
White/Caucasian: 85 percent
African-American/Black: 4 percent
Hispanic/Latino: 2 percent
Asian/Pacific Islander: 7 percent
Not reported: 2 percent
Please describe the geographic diversity of your most recent entering class.
Percentage of U.S. citizens and permanent residents: 70 percent
356
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
States represented:
California
Colorado
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Illinois
Massachusetts
Maryland
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri
New Jersey
New York
Tennessee
Utah
Virginia
Countries represented:
Bolivia
China
Ghana
India
Ireland
Korea
Lithuania
Mexico
Netherlands
Pakistan
Peru
Singapore
Taiwan
United States
Vietnam
Please describe the selectivity of your school for the most recent application cycle.
Number of matriculants: 108
Please describe the academic and employment backgrounds of your most recent entering class.
Average years of pre-MBA work experience: 4.5
Business: 28 percent
Economics: 6 percent
Engineering: 23 percent
Humanities/social science: 28 percent
Information systems/computer science: 8 percent
Math/physical science: 7 percent
Please provide student employment information for the most recent graduating class.
Class of 2008
357
Vault/CGSM Guide to Business School Diversity, 2010 Edition
Consulting: 6 percent
Finance: 28 percent
General management: 4 percent
Human resources management: 10 percent
Marketing: 15 percent
Supply chain management: 36 percent
Accenture
ArvinMeritor
Bank of America
BP America Production Company
Chevron
Dell, Inc.
Ford Motor Company
General Mills, Inc.
GMAC
Intel Corporation
Johnson & Johnson
Lockheed Martin
Microsoft Corporation
Sears Holding Corporation
Thermo Fisher Scientific
358