Loyola University Maryland

November 22, 2009
 
Loyola Graduate Programs in Global Management draw accolades in Entrepreneur/Princeton Review survey

Loyola’s Sellinger School of Business and Management was one of 15 graduate schools of business recognized by The Princeton Review’s “Student Opinion Honors for Business Schools” in the “Global Management” category.  The complete results of the survey are available in the April 2009 issue of Entrepreneur magazine, on newsstands March 24.

Created and compiled by The Princeton Review, the education services company, from student survey data provided for its 2009 edition of the Best 296 Business Schools, the “Student Opinion Honors for Business Schools” are reported in six categories considered critical for success in a business career. In addition to global management, these categories include accounting, finance, general management, marketing and operations.

“I am thrilled that the Sellinger School’s outstanding global management programs have drawn praise from our most important audience—our students,” said Karyl B. Leggio, Ph.D., dean of the Sellinger School of Business and Management. “International issues and experiences are a priority in all of our graduate programs, and I am so pleased to see that our students recognize and approve of the importance we’ve placed on preparing them to lead in an increasingly global economy.”

In addition to the global emphasis in its graduate programs, which includes an international business concentration and a required international elective for all students, Loyola’s Sellinger School also considers international experience and expertise to be a crucial component of its undergraduate curriculum. International study is one of the three components of Sellinger’s undergraduate experiential learning requirement, and the Sellinger School collaborates with Loyola’s College of Arts and Sciences on an interdisciplinary Global Studies major that offers a framework for analyzing issues and processes that transcend national and international boundaries.

The complete results are available at www.entrepreneur.com/topcolleges. The business schools appear in alphabetical order on the lists and are not ranked 1 to 15. More than 80 schools are recognized in all.

  


For more information or questions regarding this story, contact Courtney Jolley via email at cjolley@loyola.edu or phone 410-617-5025.