Wednesday, August 1, 2007

New study takes a fresh look at the value of education.







Gary A. Anderson

In business and academic circles, few would dispute that education offers added value to individuals and to the communities where they live and work.


But how do you put a price on that value?


Numerous published studies address how—and how much—education contributes to income. Indeed, vast theoretical and empirical research at both the micro and macro levels zeroes in on the notion of investment in education to build human capital.


Now, two colleagues in the College of Business’s Department of Finance have taken a fresh look at this equation in an article titled “Building Human Capital through Education,” published recently in the Journal of Legal Economics.








James D. Keys

Gary A. Anderson, associate professor, and James. D. Keys (MSF ’87, MBA ’77), instructor, developed an alternative model to the present-value assessment of the differential in after-tax earnings and fringe benefits between a college education and a high school one.


Using data from sources such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics within the U.S. Department of Labor, their new model evaluates the present value of differential after-earnings and fringe benefits as predicated on the mean year-round earnings in 2002 for both sexes and all races. The model also measures the present value contribution to federal income tax revenue associated with the increased earnings among individuals holding a college degree compared to those with a high school diploma.


“Our approach differs from others in that we looked at average earnings and we used the actual age earnings profiles for college and high school graduates,” Anderson said. “We also used the actual marginal tax rate earnings—or the differential earnings—something not previously done in this type of research.”

 

In addition, their research integrates data related to different work/life statistics associated with higher degrees of education. Their hypothesis was that those who achieve higher education likely remain more active in the workforce longer.




“A key underlying premise of our research is that it is important to understand how the value of education is measured.”


James. D. Keys, instructor, Department of Finance




“A key underlying premise of our research is that it is important to understand how the value of education is measured,” Keys said. “This understanding, in turn, provides a better framework for seeing how future opportunities may marginally affect human capital.”


Why it pays to go to college (and look who benefits).


The study calculated that the present value of future after-tax earnings plus fringe benefits for the average high school graduate comes in at almost $1 million. For the average college graduate, the value of earnings plus benefits—less the cost of tuition and the loss of four years of earnings while attending college—doubles to approximately $2 million.


The present value of the differential in after-tax earnings with fringe benefits adds up to $927.000, giving further credence to the old adage that education pays.


And not only college graduates reap the rewards of higher education. While individuals benefit more than $900,000 in present value, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) benefits by more than $100,000 in taxes paid.


Research carries a message for students, business, and government.

         

In his classes, Anderson presents the concept that human capital constitutes the largest asset that most high school and college graduates possess.


“I hope to impress upon my students the idea that they should view the decisions they make over their careers as contributions to this asset,” he said. “Students often find this perspective difficult to grasp because the payoffs are in the future—with the largest contributions occurring in the quite distant future.”


Recognizing that remoteness, the study calculates the benefits in yet another way: If one breaks down the present value of the difference in earnings on an hourly equivalent rate of pay—and assuming a student invests forty hours per week in attending and preparing for undergraduate classes over a nine-month period for four years—the current rate of after-tax pay comes to approximately $161 per hour, a compelling figure.


Anderson believes the research he and Keys conducted carries another message to business and legislators funding higher education.




“It simply makes sense at the basic dollars-and-cents level to fund student education.”


Gary A. Anderson, associate professor, Department of Finance




“Yes, our students and our economy benefit from education—and it makes us more competitive globally,” he said. “But as our research indicates, it simply makes sense at the basic dollars-and-cents level to fund student education.”

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College of Business Administration earns spot in Best 290 Business Schools: 2008 Edition of The Princeton Review.

Those who consult The Princeton Review’s Best 290 Business Schools: 2008 Edition will find 23 newcomers this year, one of them the Chapman Graduate School of Business in the College of Business Administration at Florida International University.


“We are very pleased to add the College of Business Administration to this year’s book and to recommend it to our readers and users of our web site as one of the best institutions they could attend to earn an MBA,” said Robert Franek, vice president of The Princeton Review, a New York-based education services company and publisher of Princeton Review guides.


Best 290 Business Schools includes two-page profiles with write-ups on academics, student life, and admissions plus ratings for academics, selectivity, and career placement services. The Princeton Review does not name a best business school overall or rank those in the book from one to 290. Instead, it has eleven ranking lists with each one reporting the top ten business schools (of the 290 in the book) in different categories from “Toughest to Get Into” to “Best Career Prospects.”


The Princeton Review compiles the book’s ratings and ranking lists based on institutional data it collects from the schools and on its surveys of more than 19,000 students attending them. The survey asks students about themselves and their career plans as well as about their school’s academics, student body, and campus life.


Published by Random House/Princeton Review Books, the guide will be available in bookstores October 9, 2007.

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Graduate programs expand schedules and locations to meet demand.







Sharon Lassar

The popularity of programs in the College of Business Administration has prompted the business school to devise more opportunities to accommodate student interest. Among new delivery options for programs in the Chapman Graduate School: the Master of Accounting (MACC) and the Master of Science in Finance (MSF).


MACC moves to weekdays.


The MACC program, well-established as a convenient, ten-month, lockstep, Saturday program, began a new weekday schedule this summer.




“We had many requests from prospective students for a program held during the week, especially for religious reasons.”


Sharon Lassar, director of the School of Accounting




“We had many requests from prospective students for a program held during the week, especially for religious reasons,” said Sharon Lassar, director of the School of Accounting. “In addition, demand for the program has been increasing over time. As a result of that growing interest, we felt we could admit more students while maintaining the program’s high quality.”








William Welch

Students in the new group meet at University Park in the MARC Building, which Lassar describes as “a wonderful facility with the state-of-the-art classrooms such a high-caliber program needs.” Like their counterparts in the Saturday program, students take two classes a week. One takes place on Monday evening, the other on Thursday evening.


“This new structure also differs from the Saturday MACC program by putting greater emphasis on IT, which we achieved by replacing Environment of Accounting and Auditing with a course on information security,” Lassar said.


The School of Accounting added new faculty to handle the additional teaching load.


“We hired six new faculty members, two of them specifically to free other professors for the weekday program,” Lassar said. “We will continue to evaluate student demand to determine the next time to begin a new group.”


MSF grows in its new Downtown Center home.








Emmanuel N. Roussakis

“Introduced in January, 2001, the MSF-Fast Track (FT) has been structured as a lockstep, eleven-course, twelve-month executive program, enabling participants to benefit from its cohesive and progressive design and from sharing their unique perspectives and experiences with each other,” said Emmanuel N. Roussakis, director, MSF Downtown program and graduate certificate programs in banking.


He actively promoted the reorganization of the graduate program and implemented the MSF-FT when he served as chair of the Finance Department from 2000-2003.


In the past, the college admitted two groups yearly, with different concentrations at two campuses: financial management and corporate finance at University Park, and investment at the FIU Pembroke Pines Center. Because of Miami’s importance as an international financial center, international banking and commercial bank management became the focus of the MSF program at the college’s  Downtown Center.




“With the opening of the Downtown Center and the creation of an advisory board for our program in October, 2006, we saw the possibility of expanding the MSF.”


Isabel Lopez (MIB ’06, BBA ’03), MSF program manager




“With the opening of the Downtown Center and the creation of an advisory board for our program in October, 2006, we saw the possibility of expanding the MSF,” said Isabel Lopez (MIB ’06, BBA ’03), MSF program manager. “One of Dr. Roussakis’s strongest areas of expertise is international banking, which we knew he could promote to banks downtown. We also knew that our advisory board members would help open doors for us to hold information sessions at their firms and help expand our enrollment.”


In addition to the new location in the Downtown Center, another change has occurred: the MSF is simultaneously admitting students for the University Park and Downtown Center programs—the first time two groups will start the program at the same time.

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College student Jacob Dobbs travels with a purpose.







Jacob Dobbs at the Forbidden City

When Jacob Dobbs goes to far-flung places, a frequent occurrence, he does so not as a tourist but as someone who wants to learn and serve. The third-year International Business Honors (IB Honors) major and new president of the College of Business Administration’s International Business Honor Society (IBHS)—which has a strong focus on international community service—has a long history of civic engagement.


Currently, he works and teaches in Beijing, part of a summer program that combines a twenty-hour-per-week job with teaching English fifteen hours weekly at a local school. He won an award from the Asian Studies Department at Florida International University to help him with his expenses in a program recommended by one of his Chinese professors.


Dobbs applied for the opportunity at the Teaching English as a Foreign Language International (TEFL) web site, www.TEFLintl.com. TEFL partners with the Institute of International Education (www.oiie.org), which offers paid internships overseas. He began his stint in China by going through TEFL training to get certified to teach.




“The Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) certificate enables students like me to have a three-month contract during which I get practical experience working in a local job and teaching.”


Jacob Dobbs




“The Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL) certificate enables students like me to have a three-month contract during which I get practical experience working in a local job and teaching,” he said.


Arrival in Beijing brings challenges.


A seasoned traveler, Dobbs weathered several early misadventures upon his June arrival in Beijing.


“Following the sun for fifteen hours from New Jersey to Beijing was crazy enough, but stepping off the plane brought back a lot of nostalgia from my experience in Thailand three years ago,” he said. “I had walked into another sea of taxi drivers, people waving signs with names on them, and tour guides. And, unfortunately, just like in Thailand, my name was not on any of the signs that greeted me after walking through the entrance gate.”








Jacob Dobbs in Beijing

Eventually, he “caught sight of a little hand extending from the crowd with ‘Jacob Dobbs and Shaun Callahan,’ (another program participant) printed on a piece of paper. My brief relief was followed by increasing concern when I actually met the person who would be taking us to what I thought would be our apartment. The little hand came from a girl. . . who is no older than I am, apparently had no connections with our program, couldn’t drive, and couldn’t speak a word of English.”


After a number of other mishaps over a three-hour period, Dobbs finally found himself in the right place and had a happy ending to the day when the program supervisor appeared to take him and Callahan to dinner for, what else, Beijing duck.


Within a brief period, Dobbs settles in.


By mid-June, Dobbs had begun an internship in marketing at a pan-Asian magazine company called Asia Weekly and continued to work on acquiring the language certificate.




“I’m working hard, but that doesn’t mean that I haven't had time to enjoy the history at a few temples and experience the serenity of Beijing’s gardens.”


Jacob Dobbs




“I’m working hard, but that doesn’t mean that I haven't had time to enjoy the history at a few temples and experience the serenity of Beijing’s gardens,” he said.


Rotary International helped shape his international vision.


Dobbs has traveled around the world since the end of tenth grade, often expedited by Rotary International programs. One, Interact, focuses on community service for students 14-18 and brought him to Japan for a short period. Another, Rotary Youth Exchange, took him to Thailand for a one-year, student-exchange in 2005. That event put him in the country—and almost in harm’s way—during the December tsunami. An article titled “Youth Exchange Student Volunteers at Tsunami Disaster Scene in Thailand” at http://www.rotary.org/newsroom/programs/archives/050203.html chronicles his experiences and his significant contributions to the relief effort. Dobbs received considerable praise for his work, including recognition as a distinguished volunteer by the United States Embassy in Bangkok.

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EPE courses help employee advance—and add greater value to her company.







Judy Delgado

A combination of natural gifts, support from key people at Preferred Care Partners Corporation, and courses offered through Executive and Professional Education (EPE) in the College of Business Administration, have enabled Judy Delgado (BS ’92) to move up in her company and to contribute to it more effectively.


It began with an email from the college announcing the EPE course titled Extraordinary Administrative Support. Delgado, formerly an administrative assistant in the member services department, had recently been promoted to training and development coordinator in the human resources (HR) department. There, she reported to Peter Setzer, vice president of operations and a member of the college’s Executive MBA (EMBA) Advisory Board, and to Cynthia Fernández, director of HR, and a member of the college’s Master of Science in Human Resource Management (MSHRM) Advisory Board. They thought the EPE course would benefit Delgado in her new position.


They were right.








James Bussey

“Part of the job involved creating training for employees and the course helped me very much,” she said. “Watching the instructor, James Bussey, and seeing the interaction among the participants—hearing their triumphs and heartaches—got to the heart of what administrative assistants need and feel, enabling me to relate to others at this level and to think about appropriate training within our company.”


Course builds awareness: an essential part of administration.


“The idea behind the course is to give everyone greater self-awareness and a deeper understanding of their environment,” Bussey, executive assistant/chief of staff, Executive Dean’s Office and frequent EPE instructor, said. “Administrative assistants form a critical part of any organization—as office managers, gatekeepers, listeners, and communicators. They run meetings, have to manage time, and must build relationships, including with their bosses, who may have a different style from theirs. We believe that increasing their awareness of these elements of their jobs helps improve their effectiveness.”








Joseph L. Caruncho

Delgado’s strengths as an administrative assistant had not gone unnoticed by CEO Joseph L. Caruncho, (BBA ’81), president and CEO of Preferred Care Partners Corporation, chair of the college’s Dean’s Council, and a strong university supporter in other ways.


“She had taken the lead in creating a real case study on how initiative can work,” he said. “It was a great idea, and it led to our moving her to our HR department, where she could facilitate programs in our Preferred Care Partners Corporate University.”


EPE program on HR helps Delgado gain her footing in new department.




“The course had a high level of practicality: real people in the real world in real jobs. I continue to refer to my notes almost weekly.”


Judy Delgado, team leader, HR, Preferred Care Partners




“After my promotion to training and development coordinator in HR, I took another EPE course called Human Resources Management,” said Delgado, who recently was promoted again, this time to team leader in HR. “It gave me a holistic view of what HR is all about. The course had a high level of practicality: real people in the real world in real jobs. I continue to refer to my notes almost weekly.”


Drawing from what she learned in both courses as well as from her own experiences, she created a training seminar for the company’s administrative assistants. It ran for three half-day sessions during Administrative Assistants Week in April, 2007.








Cynthia Fernández

“What she learned in the HR course expanded her knowledge of HR in general and allowed her to understand HR’s role in the training and development of employees,” Fernández said.


Preferred Care Partners and EPE see synergistic opportunities.


Though Preferred Care Partners offers a number of internal training and development programs, Caruncho sees a strong future between his company and EPE.




“We plan to take advantage of EPE’s expertise rather than trying to replicate their courses in house.”


Joseph L. Caruncho, CEO, Preferred Care Partners, and president, Dean’s Council




“On the Dean’s Council, we look for ways the university and business community can strengthen their relationship,” he said. “In our case, we plan to take advantage of EPE’s expertise rather than trying to replicate their courses in house.”


“We are thrilled with the opportunity to work with businesses to develop the skills of their employees,” said Robert Garcia (EMBA ’97), director of EPE. “We congratulate Judy Delgado and find it incredibly rewarding that she used the skills she learned in our programs to take advantage of the opportunities offered to her at Preferred Care Partners.”


To learn more about EPE, which offers a full menu of standard courses and can also customize courses for a company’s needs, visit http://business.fiu.edu/epe/epe.cfm.

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New graduate student organization GROWs sense of social responsibility.

A collective goal motivated Master of International Business (MIB) students in the College of Business Administration’s Chapman Graduate School: to apply their skills in both a business and social context to help communities nearby and around the world. Their passion and commitment fueled the launch of Graduates Reaching Out Worldwide, or GROW.




“Through GROW, we hope to fortify and deepen graduate students’ understanding and appreciation of community and global service.”


Melissa Miranda, president, GROW










MIB students plan to enlarge their community service experience by participating in GROW—Graduates Reaching Out Worldwide.

“Through GROW, we hope to fortify and deepen graduate students’ understanding and appreciation of community and global service,” said Melissa Miranda, recently elected president of the GROW chapter and slated to graduate in December, 2007. “They actively will plan and participate in international and local community service activities.”


GROW members intend to work hand in hand with local organizations, corporations, and community groups to increase awareness of the social issues affecting millions of disenfranchised people globally.


“We hope to highlight the multiple barriers pertaining to poverty, homelessness, and social injustice while gaining the experience and insight needed to become better business and community leaders,” said Sherman Humphrey (BBA ’05), GROW vice president, and August, 2008, candidate for the MIB degree. “We want to promote and engage in intensive social discourse as a way to foster new ideas and become catalysts for change.”


GROW leaps into action, ready to make a difference.


The students elected a full slate of officers and drafted a constitution for the association.


Next on the agenda: establishing connections, such as with Friends of the Orphans, a non-profit organization dedicated to improving the lives of orphaned, abandoned, and disadvantaged children; and Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos, a network of orphanages in Latin América and the Caribbean.


“We plan to visit one of the orphanages in late 2007 or early 2008,” Humphrey said. “We can share our business knowledge in whatever ways are most helpful to the children and staff. We want to break the cycle of poverty and provide access to the opportunities we are all fortunate enough to have experienced.”


Principles reflect global connections.








Robert Hogner

As an epicenter of the Latin Américan and Caribbean diasporas, Florida International University provides an ideal location for promoting global social awareness through active engagement in international and local community service projects.


GROW’s efforts further promote the university as a place that welcomes diversity and encourages a sense of social responsibility.


“We feel it’s essential for students here to be conscious of the conditions in their countries of origin,” Humphrey said. “We also must understand more fully our rich cultural heritage and the need for mutual respect.”


Open to all present and former graduate students, GROW provides an unprecedented opportunity for students to get involved through volunteer community service and international projects. 




“I am not aware of any other organizations chartered with the global scope of GROW or this kind of direct linkage with an MIB program. What our graduate students have started here may be unique.”


Robert Hogner, associate professor, Department of Management and International Business, and GROW faculty advisor




“Other universities may have formalized service projects at the local level, but I am not aware of any other organizations chartered with the global scope of GROW or this kind of direct linkage with an MIB program,” said Robert Hogner, associate professor, Department of Management and International Business, coordinator of the college’s Civic Engagement Initiative and GROW’s faculty advisor. “What our graduate students have started here may be unique.”


“We are looking to make a difference and to build long-term relationships with communities that truly need our help,” Miranda said. “Compassion. Unity. Teamwork. Responsibility. These should comprise an indispensable part of any college education today. . . . and they happen to be the core principles at the foundation of GROW.”

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Alumna succeeds in international business.







Andrea Padilla

Many of our students aspire to work for a multinational corporation or in international business, and quite a number of them have succeeded in doing so. Among them is Andrea Padilla (BBA ’99), regional director of Corporate Public Relations and Executive Communication for Hewlett-Packard (HP) Latin América.


Hewlett-Packard has grown to become the world’s largest IT company, now employing 156,000 people in 170 countries—a diverse and international group.


Padilla oversees communication campaigns, including event management and regional consulting, for twelve Latin Américan countries in which HP operates. She spends half of her time traveling in Latin América and has accumulated much experience working abroad.


Before joining HP, Padilla spent six years working for Burson Marsteller, a global public relations and communications agency, where she managed the company’s technology practice and provided strategic consulting for a range of clients, including SAP, IBM, Qualcomm, Electrolux, and Visa. In 2001, Padilla lived in Brasil for a year,managing corporate communication for Burson Marsteller’s technology clients in Sao Paulo.


Working in Brasil was a challenge.


Living and working in Brasil was a cultural immersion, Padilla said.


“I didn’t speak Portuguese and had ten people reporting to me, so it took a while to get used to the cultural differences and the flexible deadlines,” she said. “But, despite the differences, it was an excellent opportunity for me to learn about another country. Brasil is the fastest growing market in Latin América, and it offers a lot of insight into the field of technology.”


Brasil was not her only experience abroad. In 2006, Padilla managed HP’s corporate communication plan for launching of its operational center in Costa Rica.


Padilla offers advice to students.

 

Padilla encourages students and young alumni interested in the international business to:



  • earn hands on experience through internships

  • gain exposure to other cultures and other backgrounds

  • read industry news

  • acquire technology skills

  • expand global viewpoint and gain a broader respect for all countries and cultures


“FIU’s business school was my first exposure to what my working environment would be like today,” Padilla said. “It was an invaluable experience that led me to my present career.”


Padilla recently joined the Alumni Circle in order to give back to her alma mater. The Alumni Circle provides a forum for mid- to senior-level alumni to advise and work with the executive dean and other administrators in the college on programs and initiatives to further its goals.


 “I look forward to devoting time and effort to helping the college build a more educated workforce and to seeing even more graduates from the university succeed in international business,” Padilla said.

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