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Atkinson Graduate School of Management : ウィキペディア英語版
Atkinson Graduate School of Management

The George H. Atkinson Graduate School of Management (Atkinson) is the Masters in Business Administration (MBA) program at Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, United States. It is one of only two MBA programs in the world accredited for both Business Administration (AACSB International) and Public Administration (NASPAA). Atkinson was established by Willamette in 1974 and has an enrollment of approximately 312 students.
==History==
Atkinson Graduate School was founded at Willamette University in 1974 and moved into the new Seeley G. Mudd Building in 1975.〔NorthWest Point of Capitalism. ''The Oregonian'', January 4, 1988.〕 The first year had 52 students and five professors. The program is older than the management program at Yale University.〔 Stephen Archer served as the school's first dean.〔 The school was first named as the Willamette University School of Administration before being renamed as the George H. Atkinson Graduate School of Management.〔Hamburg, Ken. Atkinson teaches success. ''The Oregonian'', January 17, 1988.〕 Atkinson was a businessman in the construction industry and a trustee of Willamette before he died in 1978. He served as president of the board of trustees and made the largest single donation in school history up to that time in 1969 when his foundation gave $3.4 million to the university.〔
In 1978, the Center for Business-Government Studies was added to the school after Willamette received a grant from the M. J. Murdock Charitable Trust. The program was designed to better understand the relationships between the government and businesses.〔 In 1988, the school was recognized by ''U.S. News & World Report'' and the fifth best business school in the Midwest and West region.〔 It was the highest ranked of any school in the Pacific Northwest.〔 Enrollment was 130 students with 10 full-time professors.〔 At that time the program was led by Dean David L. Puryear with a tuition of just over $8,000 per year.〔
In 1990, the school hired G. Dale Weight to serve as dean, the same year he was removed as chief executive officer of the Benj. Franklin Savings and Loan after the thrift was seized by the government during the Savings and loan crisis. Weight remained dean until 1998. At that time Atkinson GSM had 184 students and 11 full-time faculty members. Tuition was $14,900 per year then and incoming students scored an average of 550 on the Graduate Management Admission Test.〔 From 1998 to 2002, Atkinson was led by Dean Bryan Johnston.〔Balas, Monique. ("Two vie for top post at OSU campus", ) ''The Bulletin''. Retrieved December 12, 2007.〕 Johnston had been the interim president at Willamette and a member of the Oregon House of Representatives.〔"Willamette names Johnston dean of Atkinson grad school", ''The Oregonian'', June 2, 1998.〕
Atkinson opened a center to the north in Portland's Pearl District in August 2005 to provide a two-year MBA program in the Oregon's most populous city. In February 2007, the Jeld-Wen Foundation made a $2.5 million donation to endow a free-enterprise professorship at the school, the largest donation ever for the graduate program.〔Rose, Michael. Willamette: Jeld-Wen will donate $2.5 million. ''Statesman Journal'', February 1, 2007.〕 Dean Jim Goodrich, who joined Atkinson in 2003, retired from the school in June 2007,〔Loew, Tracy. "Management school dean set to retire in June", ''Statesman Journal'', November 18, 2006.〕 with Debra J. Ringold serving as interim dean.〔Ticker. ''Statesman Journal'', September 4, 2007.〕 Previously the JELD-WEN Professor in Free Enterprise, Ringold was named as the permanent dean in January 2008.〔(People on the Move. ) ''Portland Business Journal'', January 21, 2008.〕 In 2007, the Center for Business Education ranked the school 58th in their Beyond Grey Pinstripes rankings for emphasizing social and environmental awareness in the business world. The school was admitted to the Graduate Management Admission Council in June 2009.〔 〕 As of 2009, the program had approximately 230 students, and was the largest full-time MBA program in Oregon. The program enrollment grew to 312 students as of 2011.
The Atkinson Graduate School of Management was ranked among Forbes magazine's "Best Business Schools" list in 2009 and 2011. It is the only ranked program on Forbes' 2011 list in Oregon. The MBA program was ranked as the third largest in the Portland area by the ''Portland Business Journal'' in 2012. The school's Portland center moved to Northwest 12th Avenue and Kearney to the RiverTec building in 2013. In June 2015, the school received a $1 million gift from alumnus George Hoyt and his wife Colleen.

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