Thursday, March 10, 2011

stanford: Business of Education Symposium - April 6, 2011

mar 9th, 2011 CE

---------- Forwarded message ----------


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: GSB 


Stanford 2011 Business Education Symposium Innovation in Education

Co-sponsored by the Stanford Graduate School of Business and School of Education

Wednesday, April 6

5:00 - 9:00 pm
Vidalakis Dining Hall
Schwab Residential Center

Register Today!

Featuring Keynote Speaker Jim Shelton, MBA/MA Ed '93, the US Department of Education's Assistant Deputy Secretary for Innovation and Improvement. Mr. Shelton was previously a program director for the education division of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a partner at NewSchools Venture Fund, and a senior consultant with McKinsey & Company. Mr. Shelton holds an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business and an MA from the Stanford School of Education.

Jim Shelton

Symposium attendees will have the opportunity to participate in roundtable discussions with leaders from the field, covering a diverse range of topics including but not limited to: Organizational Leadership, Educational Entrepreneurship, Blended Learning, Philanthropy, Charter School Management, and Education Consulting.

Contact Symposium Leadership with any questions.

Stanford Graduate School of Business Stanford University School of Education

Thank you to our Corporate Partners for their generosity and support of the Stanford 2011 Business of Education Symposium.

Industry Partner

Bain & Company

Industry Activity Sponsors

BCG, Cisco, The Parthenon Group, Target

1 comment:

Pagan said...

Jerks Takeover Telagana Movement
17 of the 33 statues adorning the Tank Bund, one of the most-famous tourist spots in the Andhra Pradesh capital city, were destroyed by Telangana supporters. The Tank Bund presents a gory sight now. Statues they may be, but they had ''life'' in them.

What should one say of Emperor Srikrishnadevaraya, who ruled the famous Vijayanagara empire 500 years ago? Annamacharya was the first Telugu 'vaaggeyakara' who penned thousands of 'keertans' glorifying Lord Venkateswara with deep devotion. Siddhendra Yogi was the founder of the world-famous Kuchipudi classical dance form more than 600 years ago.