Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Stanford Graduate School of Business (also known as Stanford GSB or simply GSB) is the graduate business school of Stanford University, a private research university in Stanford, California. For several years it has been the most selective business school in the United States, [3] admitting only about 6% of applicants. [4]
The Stanford University Graduate School of Education (Stanford GSE or GSE) is one of the top education schools in the United States. It offers master's and doctoral programs in more than 25 areas of specialization, along with joint degrees with other programs at Stanford University including business , law , and public policy. [ 1 ]
This is a list of notable persons who are alumni of Stanford Graduate School of Business in California. [1] Alumni. Charles R. Schwab, ...
The Stanford University Graduate School of Education grew out of the Department of the History and Art of Education, one of the original twenty-one departments at Stanford, and became a professional graduate school in 1917. [53] The Stanford Graduate School of Business was founded in 1925 at the urging of then-trustee Herbert Hoover. [54]
Daniel Herschlag, senior associate dean at Stanford University School of Medicine, graduate education and postdoctoral affairs and professor of biochemistry and, by courtesy, of chemistry; Leonard Herzenberg, professor of genetics, winner of Kyoto Prize for development of fluorescent-activated cell sorting
Susan Athey (Ph.D. in business school), winner of the John Bates Clark Medal (2007) in Economics of Technology and professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences at the Stanford Graduate School of Business; Cara Drinan (J.D. 2002), author and professor of law at Catholic University
O'Reilly was an assistant professor at the UCLA Anderson School of Management from 1976 to 1978. [1] He taught at the Haas School of Business from 1979 to 1993, where he became a tenured professor. [1] Since 1993, he has been the Frank E. Buck Professor of Management at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. [1]
He joined Stanford as an assistant professor in 2000 and became a full professor in 2008. His research is in the fields of Microeconomic Theory and Industrial Organization. Since 2016, he has been the Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean of Stanford Graduate School of Business. He was the Holbrook Working Professor of Price Theory in the ...