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*[[Randy Tobias]], former CEO of [[Eli Lilly]] and current U.S. Ambassador
*[[Randy Tobias]], former CEO of [[Eli Lilly]] and current U.S. Ambassador
*[[Robert James Waller]], author of [[Bridges of Madison County]]
*[[Robert James Waller]], author of [[Bridges of Madison County]]
*[[Jimmy Wales]], former CEO of [[Bomis]], co-founder of [[Wikipedia]], president of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]]
*[[Jimmy Wales]], former CEO of [[Bomis]], founder of [[Wikipedia]], president of the [[Wikimedia Foundation]]


== See also ==
== See also ==

Revision as of 05:06, 4 June 2009

Kelley School of Business
MottoOne School.
Endless Possibilities.
Established1920
DeanDaniel C. Smith
Students6,196
Undergraduates4,324 (Bloomington)
973 (Indianapolis)
Postgraduates712 (Bloomington)
187 (Indianapolis)
Location, ,
AffiliationsIndiana University
Websitewww.kelley.indiana.edu and www.kelley.iupui.edu

The Kelley School of Business is a top-ranked American business school and one of fourteen academic units of Indiana University. Approximately 5,800 students are enrolled amongst its Bloomington and Indianapolis campuses.

Rankings

Kelley School of Business, Bloomington
Kelley School of Business, Indianapolis

The Kelley school of business in Bloomington is one of only three in the nation for whom all undergraduate and graduate programs rank in the top 20 of the US News & World Report college rankings. Kelley was ranked 10th for its undergraduate B.S. program in business by U.S. News in their 2006 rankings and fifteenth for the MBA program by Business Week in 2008[1]; it was ranked fifth for regional MBA programs by the Wall Street Journal in 2007. US News & World Report placed it among the top business schools in the country at #11 in the 2008 edition. Its top-ranked MBA program for full-time residential students has been cited in Business Week as one of the favorites of corporate recruiters looking for general managers, marketing talent, and finance graduates.

Other definitive publications, including Money and Princeton Review, have recognized various Kelley programs as among the best. Teaching quality in core classes has been ranked #1 in the nation by both the Princeton Review and Business Week in their latest issues. The school's doctoral program has contributed to overall teaching and research excellence by sending more than 1,000 doctoral graduates to key positions in industry and academe.

Most recently, Kelley's undergraduate school was ranked 10th in the nation by Business Week, and 4th among all public business schools.

In 2006, U.S. News ranked these undergraduate programs in the top 10 in the nation:

Accounting: 7th
Entrepreneurship: 3rd
Finance: 7th
Management: 5th
Management Information Systems: 7th
Marketing: 7th
Production/Operations Management: 6th
Quantitative Analysis: 8th
Supply Chain: 10th
Real Estate: 7th

The entrepreneurship program was ranked #1 in the nation among public business schools in the same report.

The 2005 public accounting report ranked the undergraduate accounting program 9th in the nation and the graduate program as 6th in the nation.

The Godfrey Graduate and Executive Education Center

File:KelleySchool-GodfreyCenter.jpg
The Godfrey Center

The Godfrey center has 180,000 square feet (17,000 m2) of classroom and office space for use by graduate students, corporate recruiters, executive visitors and administrators. It houses administrative offices for the Master of Business Administration program, Kelley Executive Partners, the Johnson Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, and graduate accounting programs.

The Kelley School renamed its Graduate and Executive Education Center in honor of William J. Godfrey, an alumnus and successful businessman who has bequeathed land valued at $25 million.

The building features classrooms and other facilities that maximize student-faculty interaction in a collaborative setting. The most wired building on the Bloomington campus, it features both direct and wireless connectivity that will help students both inside and outside the classroom. Other special features include a "trading room," which includes informational resources comparable to most Wall Street firms. Princeton Review recently ranked Kelley's quality of facilities as #2 in the nation.

History

The School was established as "School of Commerce and Finance" of Indiana University in 1920. It was subsequently renamed "School of Business Administration" in 1933 and "School of Business" in 1938. In 1997 it was named "Kelley School of Business" after its alumnus, E.W. Kelley, Chairman of The Steak n Shake Company, gave a substantial donation of $23 million.

Initially it resided in the Commerce Building constructed in 1923 (William A. Rawles Hall since 1971), moving to the Business and Economics Building in 1940 (called Woodburn Hall since 1971) and finally to today's Business School building in 1966.

Completed in 2003, the $33 million Graduate and Executive Education Center provides state-of-the-art learning facilities to the Kelley School's graduate and executive education students and houses some of the nation's top-ranked programs and research centers. Featuring elegant limestone and oak architecture, the building provides students and faculty with every imaginable technological advantage and connects with the undergraduate facilities via a two-story limestone walkway.

In the Summer of 2005 interim Dean Dan Smith was appointed to be the new dean of the school, replacing Dean Dan Dalton who stepped down in 2004.

In a ceremony on October 21, 2005, the Kelley School renamed its Graduate and Executive Education Center in honor of William J. Godfrey, an alumnus and successful businessman who has bequeathed land valued at $25 million. It is the single largest gift in the Kelley School's history. [1]

List of programs

Undergraduate concentrations

  • Accounting
  • Business Economics and Public Policy:
    • Public Policy Analysis
    • Economic Consulting
  • Business Process Management
  • Computer Information Systems
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Finance
  • Finance-Real Estate
  • International Business (second concentration only)
  • Legal Studies
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Operations Management
  • Business Information Systems
  • Human Resource Management
  • Supply Chain Management

MBA concentrations

  • Finance
  • Management
    • Consulting
    • International Business
    • Strategic Management
  • Marketing
  • Entrepreneurship & Corporate Innovation
  • Operations & Systems Management
    • Information Systems
    • Operations
    • Decision Support Modeling
  • Strategic Analysis of Accounting Information

Notable Alumni

See also

References

Template:Big Ten business schools