Difference between revisions of "Columbia Business School"

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|Name=Columbia Business School
 
|Name=Columbia Business School
 
|Image=Columbia_GSB.gif
 
|Image=Columbia_GSB.gif
|Established=1916
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|Established=[[1916]]
 
|President=
 
|President=
 
|Dean=Dr. Costis Maglaras
 
|Dean=Dr. Costis Maglaras
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[[Image:Curluris.jpg|thumb|300px|Uris Hall and Curl Sculpture]]
 
[[Image:Curluris.jpg|thumb|300px|Uris Hall and Curl Sculpture]]
'''Columbia Business School''' is the graduate business school of Columbia University. It is housed in [[Uris Hall]] on the university's main campus in [[Morningside Heights]]. The sculpture in front of the building, ''Curl'' by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Meadmore/ Clement Meadmore], is said to resemble a dollar sign from above.
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'''Columbia Business School''' is the graduate business school of Columbia University. It has been housed on the [[Manhattanville campus]] since [[2022]], in [[Geffen Hall]] and [[Kravis Hall]], swish buildings designed by the firm Diller, Scofidio + Renfro. There was also supposed to be a whole building called the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation<ref>http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/05/02/perelman-pledges-100-million-to-columbia-business-school/</ref>, but it is unclear what happened to that.
  
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Before then, it was sequestered in hideous [[Uris Hall]] on the university's [[Morningside Heights campus|main campus]] in [[Morningside Heights]]. The sculpture in front of that building, ''[[Curl]]'' by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clement_Meadmore Clement Meadmore], is said to resemble a dollar sign from above.
  
 
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While still in Morningside, the business school was known for its raucous networking parties on its Uris deck, library where you were allowed to speak loudly (in order to collaborate), and moves to set itself off from undergraduate life on campus, placing business school computers on a different network and removing the ability to use [[Dining Dollars]] at [[Uris Deli]] (a move reversed in [[2009]]). Unsatisfied by these moves, the school sought to leave Morningside entirely, initially scouting a site on the grounds of [[St. John the Divine]] before committing to Manhattanville.
In recent years, the business school has moved to set itself off from undergraduate life on campus, placing business school computers on a different network and removing the ability to use [[Dining Dollars]] at [[Uris Deli]]. (Reversed in [[2009]]). Unsatisfied by these moves, the school has sought to move off the [[Morningside Heights campus]] entirely, initially scouting a site on the grounds of [[St. John the Divine]]. It has been confirmed, however, that the business school's next home will be [[Manhattanville campus|the new campus in Manhattanville]], in a building designed by the firm Diller, Scofidio+ Renfro.
 
  
 
CBS has a parody troupe known as the [[Follies Student Comedy Review]], renown for their videos on YouTube.
 
CBS has a parody troupe known as the [[Follies Student Comedy Review]], renown for their videos on YouTube.
  
The school logo is a nod to [[w:Hermes|Hermes]], the greek god associated with business and commerce.
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The school logo is a nod to [[w:Hermes|Hermes]], the Greek god associated with business and commerce.
  
 
==Divisions==
 
==Divisions==
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Image:Columbia GSB.png|Old business school logo
 
Image:Columbia GSB.png|Old business school logo
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
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==References==
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<references/>
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
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[[Category:Business school|*]]
 
[[Category:Business school|*]]
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[[Category:Manhattanville campus]]

Latest revision as of 22:10, 9 May 2024

Columbia Business School
Columbia GSB.gif
Established 1916
President
Dean Dr. Costis Maglaras
Degrees MBA, PhD, PhM
Enrollment 1,947 students (2005)
Website www.gsb.columbia.edu
Uris Hall and Curl Sculpture

Columbia Business School is the graduate business school of Columbia University. It has been housed on the Manhattanville campus since 2022, in Geffen Hall and Kravis Hall, swish buildings designed by the firm Diller, Scofidio + Renfro. There was also supposed to be a whole building called the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation[1], but it is unclear what happened to that.

Before then, it was sequestered in hideous Uris Hall on the university's main campus in Morningside Heights. The sculpture in front of that building, Curl by Clement Meadmore, is said to resemble a dollar sign from above.

While still in Morningside, the business school was known for its raucous networking parties on its Uris deck, library where you were allowed to speak loudly (in order to collaborate), and moves to set itself off from undergraduate life on campus, placing business school computers on a different network and removing the ability to use Dining Dollars at Uris Deli (a move reversed in 2009). Unsatisfied by these moves, the school sought to leave Morningside entirely, initially scouting a site on the grounds of St. John the Divine before committing to Manhattanville.

CBS has a parody troupe known as the Follies Student Comedy Review, renown for their videos on YouTube.

The school logo is a nod to Hermes, the Greek god associated with business and commerce.

Divisions

Business does not have "departments", it has "divisions". Almost half of the faculty are in the Finance and Economics division.

  1. Accounting Division (12)
  2. Management Division (22)
  3. Finance and Economics Division* (60)
  4. Marketing Division (16)
  5. Decision, Risk and Operations Division (19)
  • Note that there is also a department of economics

Photos

References

External links

Columbia University Schools
Architecture, Planning and PreservationArtsArts and Sciences (Graduate School)BusinessColumbia CollegeDentistryContinuing EducationEngineeringGeneral StudiesInternational and Public AffairsJournalismLawMedicineNursingPublic HealthSocial Work
Affiliated Institutions
BarnardJewish Theological SeminaryTeachers CollegeUnion Theological Seminary
Defunct Schools
PharmacyLibrary Service