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McIntire School of Commerce signs exchange agreements with Hong Kong University of Science and Technology’s School of Business and Management and with Guanghua School of Management at Peking University
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Left to right: Professor Leonard
Cheng, Acting Dean |
The McIntire School of Commerce recently established undergraduate
student exchange partnerships with two of the best business schools
in Asia: Hong Kong University of Science and Technology’s School of
Business and Management (HKUST Business School) and with Guanghua
School of Management at Peking University. The partnerships will
allow McIntire and the two Asian schools, respectively, to send
students to one another’s campuses for semester-long exchanges
starting in the 2008-2009 academic year. In addition, the agreements
lay the foundations for collaboration in graduate programs and
research between McIntire and each of the two schools.
“We are extremely excited about our new partnerships with HKUST
Business School and Guanghua School of Management,” said McIntire
Dean Carl Zeithaml. “Globalization is a major strategic initiative
for the University of Virginia, and these new alliances will provide
outstanding opportunities for student exchange programs and
collaborative faculty research in a dynamic region of the world. Our
new partnerships are cemented by a shared commitment to providing
students with an education that prepares them to become
international business leaders and outstanding global citizens. We
look forward to many fruitful years of cooperation and friendship
with both of these outstanding institutions.”
Acting Dean of HKUST Business School Professor Leonard Cheng echoed
Zeithaml’s sentiments: “International student exchange programs like
the one we are launching with the McIntire School are very important
to our goal of providing all our students with overseas experience
as we gradually move to a four-year curriculum. In addition to
student exchange programs, our students’ overseas experience can be
enhanced through other activities such as study tours, international
case competitions, community projects, and internship opportunities
outside of Hong Kong.”
HKUST Business School’s partnership with McIntire marks its 100th
student exchange agreement since it started its first exchange
program with the University of Southern California in 1994.
Dean Weiying Zhang of Guanghua School of Management also responded
enthusiastically to the new partnership. “We are delighted by our
new partnership with the McIntire School of Commerce and by the
many prospects for mutual enrichment that the partnership promises,”
Dean Zhang said. “Globalization presents us with many challenges—but
it also offers us the opportunity to meet those challenges in
creative, constructive, and collaborative ways. We see our new
partnership with McIntire as providing just such an opportunity, and
we are very much committed to making the collaboration an
outstanding success and finding ways to further deepen our
relationship.”
In addition to the undergraduate exchange programs with each school,
McIntire intends to partner with both institutions as international
immersion sites for the new M.S. in Commerce Program, which will
enroll its first class in 2008-2009. In the spring/summer of 2009,
M.S. in Commerce students will travel to Beijing and Hong Kong for
more than a month of study and interaction with business leaders in
the region. Over the next few years, the McIntire School hopes to
offer other Commerce graduate students the opportunity to visit and
study in these Asian locations. McIntire faculty will accompany the
students, and plan to teach and conduct research with the
outstanding faculty of both institutions.
During the first offering of the M.S. in Commerce Program, students
will also have an option to study in Copenhagen. The number of
international immersion sites is expected to grow as the program
expands.
Established in 1991, HKUST School of Business and Management quickly
established itself as one of the most highly respected business
schools in Asia, known for its outstanding research and teaching.
The school was the first in the region to be awarded accreditation
by both the United States-based Association to Advance Collegiate
Schools of Business (AACSB International) and the European Quality
Improvement System (EQUIS). HKUST’s business programs are
consistently ranked among the very best in the world by
international media, and the Economist Intelligence Unit called its
faculty “one of the world’s best qualified.”
Founded in 1898 as a comprehensive and national key university,
Peking University is one of the most prestigious universities in
China. Guanghua School of Management was founded in 1993 and is
committed to providing the Chinese and international business
communities with cutting-edge management knowledge and to producing
graduates who will make a difference in the world.
