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September 2015
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23 Sep 2015
Harvard Business School Announces 2015 Kaplan Life Sciences Fellows
BOSTON—One medical doctor and nine engineers are the 2015 recipients of the Robert S. Kaplan Life Sciences Fellowship at Harvard Business School (HBS). All are entering first-year students in the School's MBA program. Read more.
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21 Sep 2015
Bringing Together 73 CEOs, Mayors, Governors, Labor Leaders, University Presidents, and Policy Experts, Harvard Business School Convening Focuses on Driving Both Growth and Shared Prosperity
BOSTON—To explore one of the most important questions facing the U.S. economy – how we can achieve both economic growth and shared prosperity in our nation – Harvard Business School faculty brought together 73 CEOs, mayors, governors, labor leaders, university presidents, and policy experts last June. The convening resulted in a report released today that synthesizes research by the school’s U.S. Competiveness Project and the insights of the participating leaders. Read more.
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14 Sep 2015
Cold Call: The Launch of a New Harvard Business School Podcast Series
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) is pleased to announce the launch of a new online series, Cold Call, which takes the School’s legendary case method and distills it into podcast form. Read more.
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10 Sep 2015
HBX and Harvard Extension School announce college-level credit for HBX CORe
BOSTON—HBX and Harvard Extension School, have announced a new agreement to offer college-level credit for students taking the HBX Credential of Readiness (CORe) program. HBX is Harvard Business School’s online digital education initiative focused on providing immersive case-based online learning experiences. Harvard Extension School is Harvard University’s continuing education school providing part-time learners with affordable access to Harvard courses, certificates, and degrees. Read more.
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09 Sep 2015
Harvard Business School Alumni Survey on U.S. Competitiveness: U.S. Economy’s Failure to Generate Shared Prosperity a Concern for Business
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) alumni are optimistic about the ability of U.S. firms to compete globally but are concerned that the resulting prosperity will not be shared broadly among Americans, according to results released today. The findings are from the latest in a series of surveys conducted by Harvard Business School’s U.S. Competitiveness Project, in association with Abt SRBI. Read more.