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Edward A. Snyder : ウィキペディア英語版
Ted Snyder (economist)

Edward Adams "Ted" Snyder (born 1953) is currently Dean of and William S. Beinecke Professor of Economics and Management at Yale School of Management. He has held two other business school deanships (University of Chicago Booth School of Business and University of Virginia Darden Graduate School of Business Administration) and was Senior Associate Dean at University of Michigan Ross School of Business.
Snyder is a strong defender of management education, having stated that the MBA is the most successful professional degree in modern history based on its general value in developing an understanding of (i) markets and competition and (ii) organizations, networks, and leadership. He foresees a greater weight going forward on a “third competency”, i.e., the ability to navigate the complexities within and across societies.
Snyder has been critical of the “students are customers” view of education, and has articulated an alternative view that sets expectations and emphasizes feedback.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Are They Students? Or ‘Customers’? )
Snyder has had extraordinary success with various business school rankings. At Michigan, when he was Senior Associate Dean in charge of the MBA program and part of a team led by B. Joseph White, the school rose to the No. 2 spot on the BusinessWeek rankings. While at Virginia, Darden reached No. 9 in BusinessWeek. When Snyder arrived at Chicago in 2001, the school never had had a No. 1 ranking and was ranked No. 10 in BusinessWeek. In 2006, during his tenure at Chicago, the school moved to No. 1 in BusinessWeek and has continued to hold the position. Chicago also gained two No. 1 rankings in The Economist during his tenure.
Snyder also is a prolific fundraiser. He first developed a reputation for fundraising at Darden, and later was called a business school turnaround specialist by The Wall Street Journal based on his performance at Darden and Chicago Booth.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Turnaround Specialist to Take On Yale )
Early in his career, Snyder worked as an economist for the United States Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division.
==Yale University==
On July 1, 2011, Snyder became Dean and William S. Beinecke Professor of Economics and Management at Yale School of Management.
In naming him to this position in January 2010, Yale University President Rick Levin stated: "Ted Snyder is widely regarded as the most successful business school dean in the nation. He brings experience, enthusiasm, and vision to the Yale School of Management, and he looks forward to maintaining the school’s tradition of preparing students for leadership in business and society by raising their awareness of the context in which business operates. Ted especially appreciates Yale’s openness to collaboration across its schools and departments and its strong institutional commitment to infusing its educational programs with global experiences and global awareness. Ted is also committed to advancing the curricular innovations begun by the SOM faculty three years ago."〔http://news.yale.edu/2010/01/29/new-yale-som-dean-appointed-edward-snyder〕
Jim Baron, chair of the faculty search committee, stated said that more than 30 business school deans around the world were called for advice on who to consider and Mr. Snyder's name was the only one that kept popping up. According to Baron, Ted Snyder "was widely regarded by his peers as having done the best job in the last decade or so."〔
Snyder’s stated aspirations for Yale School of Management are to have the school become recognized as:
1. The business school that is the most involved with its home university: eminent and purposeful Yale University.
2. The most global U.S. business school in ways that are differentiating and meaningful given how the world’s economy has developed.
3. The best source of elevated leaders for escalating complexity in all sectors.
Snyder’s focus on globalization dates back to his appointment as the inaugural director of the William Davidson Institute at the University of Michigan, whose founding mission was to engage the university in transition economies such as China, India, Russia, and South Africa. During the early and mid-1990s the Davidson Institute worked directly with enterprises in these regions.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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