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At UM, new business school dean lays out ambitious agenda: Two years into her post as dean of the University of Miami's business school, Barbara Kahn is out to make her vision for the school a reality.
Thursday, November 05, 2009 1:51 AM


(Source: The Miami Herald)trackingBy Laura Figueroa, The Miami Herald

Nov. 5--Earlier this year, Barbara Kahn, dean of the University of Miami's school of Business Administration, found herself in the midst of some of the largest names in business -- heavyweights like Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric; Jim Skinner, CEO of McDonald's, and Muhtar Kent president of Coca-Cola.

It was a gathering nearly a year in the making, as Kahn spearheaded UM's effort to host its inaugural Global Business Forum in January.

As more than 700 business executives and professionals gathered at the tree-canopied Coral Gables campus, Kahn couldn't help but feel energized by the interchange of ideas.

"There was a real excitement then," Kahn said. "People were talking after the meetings, you were able to walk around and have intellectual discussions. I think that's what a university should do, bring people together to have conversations about ideas."

The summit was one of several new ideas and programs implemented by Kahn since assuming the role as the business school's dean in June 2007. She came from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business, where she worked for 17 years, four of those years as a Vice Dean overseeing undergraduate programs.

Since taking the helm of the business school, Kahn has reinstated the school's Ph.D program, recruited professors from premier institutions like Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and has seen the school's academic stock rise. It was recently ranked 43rd in the nation for MBA programs by Forbes Magazine, and listed as the No. 3 graduate program for Hispanics by Hispanic Business magazine.

"I believe in the potential of the University of Miami to be a preeminent university and a preeminent business school," Kahn said of her decision to leave Wharton.

BUSINESS TIES

She has garnered support from Miami's business community -- forging relationships with business leaders by asking them to serve on advisory boards to help shape the school's curriculum.

"When I heard her vision for the university's business school and likening it to an aspiration of having the school be to healthcare management what Wharton is to finance and Harvard is to public law and policy I was beyond impressed," said Penny Schaffer, South Florida market president for Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Florida.

Schaffer serves as on an advisory committee helping shape the school's health administration program, and said Kahn's "strong marketing background" is helping lure more business leaders to the school.

Kahn is equally as excited about working with South Florida's diverse mix of business leaders.




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