Master of Business Administration Program
Admission
Office of M.B.A. Admissions
Darden Graduate School
of Business Administration
University of Virginia
Box 6550
Charlottesville, VA 22906-6550
(434) 924-7281
(800) UVA-MBA-1
darden@virginia.edu
www.darden.virginia.edu/mba
Application Candidates are encouraged to visit the Darden Web site to obtain detailed information on admissions procedures and
requirements; to apply online or request mailing of application materials; to schedule interviews or class visits; and to learn of
upcoming events and activities.
The Darden School seeks to admit people whose academic ability, leadership potential and experience, and personal qualities indicate
that they can contribute to, and benefit from, the program. All applicants are considered without regard to race, color, religion,
gender, national origin, political affiliation, disability, age, sexual orientation, or veteran status.
The application requires completion of four essays, transcripts of all academic work, and two letters of recommendation. The
application fee is $140. All applicants are required to take the Graduate Management Aptitude Test (GMAT) administered through the
Educational Testing Service. Applicants whose native language is not English must also take the Test of English as a Foreign Language
(TOEFL) also administered by the Educational Testing Service.
Interviews, while not required, are strongly recommended and become part of the evaluation process. Candidates are encouraged to
visit the school, attend a class with current students, and interview with a member of the admissions staff. Visits are scheduled
between September and March when classes are in session.
Financial Assistance |
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The Darden Graduate School of Business Administration's financial aid program assists students in meeting the cost of
earning an M.B.A. through a combination of school-based scholarships, grants, and third-party loans, in addition to federal
loans. The school's position is that a lack of financial resources shall not bar qualified students from attending. No financial
assistance will be offered in the form of employment, and students should not plan to work during the school year. Loans,
grants, and scholarships are used to complement each other, and in the administration of the school's program, consideration is
given to differences in need arising because of marital status, differences in tuition applicable to Virginians and
non-Virginians, and other factors.
The Darden School awards scholarship, grant, and loan assistance to students who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents of the
United States. A limited number of merit-based scholarships are offered to international students.
U.S. citizens or permanent residents seeking any type of financial aid through the University must file a statement of financial
resources. The Office of Financial Aid requires that applicants use the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The applicant
must complete all student portions of this form.
The required FAFSA and University financial aid forms can be obtained directly from the Office of Financial Aid, 918 Emmet St. N.,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903, (434) 982-6000; or The Darden School Financial Aid Office, (434) 924-7739.
Financial aid decisions are made, and admitted students notified of awards, beginning in March. In order to receive timely award
notification, applicants who wish to be considered for loan assistance should apply by May 10.
Applicants will not be considered for financial assistance until they have been admitted to The Darden School and submitted other
required documents. The admissions decision is made without regard to an applicant's financial situation.
Grants and Scholarships |
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Nearly 60 percent of all Darden students receive scholarship or grant assistance from the school in amounts ranging from
$2,500 to full tuition and stipend. The school awards its limited grant funds on a need basis. The sources of scholarship and
grant aid are the unrestricted funds of the school, gifts and bequests, and special contributions from business concerns and
persons interested in encouraging business education and supporting The Darden School.
A Darden Financial Aid Application is required and should be submitted by May 10.
Merit Scholarships |
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The following is a current list of fellowships and scholarships offered by The Darden School. The availability, addition, or
deletion of individual scholarships may vary.
First-year merit scholarships, contingent upon satisfactory academic performance of a "B" avg. (3.0), and need-based grants, are
automatically carried over to the student's Second Year at The Darden School, unless superseded by a higher valued scholarship.
Batten Media Fellowship An endowed fellowship established in 1988 by Frank Batten, chairman of the board of Landmark
Communications, Inc., to assist selected journalists in earning the M.B.A. degree at The Darden School.
Batten Scholarships and Dean's Scholarships Full- and half-tuition scholarships are available for U.S. citizens and permanent
residents with an entrepreneurial spirit, demonstrated leadership skills, and a drive for innovation as noted in the admissions
application material.
Chesapeake Corporation Fellowship Established in 1992 by the Chesapeake Corporation to support students in the M.B.A./Master
of Engineering Degree Program.
Colgate W. Darden Scholarship Established in 1981.
James W. Davant-Paine Webber Scholarship An endowed scholarship for deserving students at The Darden School interested in
Financial Services.
Joel Dean Scholarship Annual scholarship awarded to deserving Second Year student(s).
Frank E. Genovese Fellowship An endowed fellowship for Second Year students at The Darden School. Those eligible are in the
top third of the first-year class after their first semester, and express a desire to seek employment in direct operating management
positions in decentralized manufacturing companies and to own their own businesses.
Gould Incorporated Fellowship An endowed fellowship established by the Gould, Inc. Foundation for students at The Darden
School.
Henry Clay Hofheimer II Fellowship For a student at The Darden School who is a resident of Virginia or North Carolina and a
graduate of a Virginia or North Carolina college.
Honeywell Scholarship Established in 1987 by the Allied-Signal Foundation and awarded to outstanding Second Year students who
are U.S. or Canadian citizens interested in working in manufacturing. Emphasis is placed on financial need, intellectual capacity, and
leadership qualities.
Industrial Relations Counselors Asian Scholarship A full-tuition, two-year scholarship awarded to an Asian national student on
the basis of scholarship, leadership, dedication to an international management career in Asia, and financial need.
International Paper Company Foundation Fellowship Established in honor of Paul A. Gorman, former chairman of the board of
International Paper, to assist top quality students at The Darden School in obtaining advanced academic degrees in the field of
business.
Lee R. Johnston Scholarship An endowed scholarship established to honor Lee R. Johnston, one of Darden's great professors, who
served students, executives, and fellow faculty members for 33 years before retiring. Awarded to Second Year M.B.A. or doctoral students
concentrating on entrepreneurship.
Kiplinger Prize An annual scholarship offered through the Kiplinger Foundation to a Second Year candidate in recognition of
outstanding achievement during the First Year of study. The recipient will have demonstrated academic excellence in the study of
business management coupled with demonstrated or potential qualities of leadership.
Robert E. Lamb Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by Robert E. Lamb, III (M.B.A. '70), for students at The Darden
School.
Landmark Communications Incorporated Scholarship For Second Year students at The Darden School who have demonstrated academic
excellence in their First Year.
Henry Wayne and Annie Griffin Lewis Scholarship An endowed scholarship established with a gift from Samuel A. Lewis, a former
member of The Darden Foundation's Board of Trustees, in honor of his parents for students at the Darden.
Macfarlane Fellowship An endowed scholarship established in 1990 by John G. Macfarlane III, for second-year students at The
Darden School who show financial need, display academic achievement in finance, and plan to pursue a career in finance.
John Patterson Mast Memorial Scholarship Established in September of 1988 by Mrs. Louise Gilmer Mast, in honor of her late
husband to fund scholarships for students who demonstrate financial need and were either born in or are current residents of the nine
southwestern Virginia Counties - Buchanan, Dickenson, Lee, Russell, Scot, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, and Wise.
Edward May Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by Edward May's family for students at The Darden School.
Fred W. McWane Memorial Fund Fellowship An endowed fellowship, established to honor one of the original founders of the School
in recognition of the scope and magnitude of his contributions, for students at The Darden School with financial need.
Henry E. McWane Scholarship An endowed scholarship established in recognition of Henry E. McWane, the first president of The
Darden School Foundation Trustees, for students at The Darden School with financial need.
Tayloe Murphy Scholarship Established in 1987 with gifts originally contributed for the Tayloe Murphy Professor of Business
Administration. No restrictions are placed on the selection process by which deserving students are awarded scholarships.
Edmund S. Muskie Fellowship [Separate Application required via Muskie Foundation] Annual fellowship established by the U.S.
Congress in 1992 to encourage economic and democratic growth in the countries of the former Soviet Union by allowing citizens of
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and
Uzbekistan to have the opportunity to study business administration. Fellowship covers tuition and a living stipend. Application
information at: http://www.actr.org/ or via e-mail at: fellows@actr.org.
Kenneth Nahigian Memorial Fellowship An endowed fellowship established by Kenneth Nahigian's family, friends, and Darden
alumni as a memorial to be awarded by the faculty to Second Year Darden students of outstanding caliber and promise, and demonstrated
financial need.
Marion M. and Samuel T. Pendleton Fellowship An endowed fellowship for students at The Darden School who are residents of
England, Scotland, Wales, or North Ireland, who demonstrate high leadership and scholarship qualities and show a seriousness of purpose
to serve their home country in the public or private sector.
D. W. and G. B. Richardson Scholarship Originally established in 1956, this scholarship honors Douglas W. and George B.
Richardson.
Roger H. Sherman Fund An endowed fund established by Lucille H. Sherman as a memorial to her husband, Roger H. Sherman, for
students at The Darden School who give promise of becoming outstanding citizens.
William Wooding Sihler Scholarship An endowed scholarship fund established in 2000 by alumni of The Darden School in
recognition of Professor Bill Sihler's dedication to students and learning. The Sihler Scholarship(s) will be made without regard to
need; to candidates accepted for admission to the First Year M.B.A. Program, whose academic record is above average and who have
demonstrated entrepreneurial ability.
Sydney F. Small Memorial Fellowship Fund An endowed scholarship fund established with income from a trust bequeathed by a
former and dedicated supporter of The Darden School for students at The Darden School.
Daniel Kerr Stewart Endowed Scholarship Fund Established in honor of Daniel Kerr Stewart by a generous gift of Jonathan Bryan
III and C.M. Tribble of Richmond Virginia. For Second Year students at The Darden School who have demonstrated academic excellence in
their First Year.
Thomas I. Storrs Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by the NCNB Corporation in honor of Thomas I. Storrs, their
former chairman and chief executive officer. For Second Year students at The Darden School who, like Thomas Storrs, exhibit the
qualities of scholarship and leadership that will make them both effective businesspersons and humanitarians.
Julius Tahija East Asian Studies Scholarship Established in honor of Mr. Tahija, an Indonesian industrialist, whose primary
interest is in joint American/Asian ventures, for students enrolled in the M.B.A./MA at The Darden School.
TEP Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by the TEP classes of 1988 and 1989 for deserving students at The Darden
School in their pursuit of an M.B.A. degree.
Morton G. Thalhimer Fellowship An endowed fellowship for the encouragement and assistance of students at The Darden School
whose attitudes exemplify outstanding qualities of personal character and integrity - qualities so respected and exemplified by the man
for whom the fellowship is named.
Worrell International Fellowship(s) Fellowship(s) that reimburse M.B.A. tuition and living expenses for students from
developing countries who demonstrate a commitment to bettering their home economies, typically through four years of post-M.B.A.
employment with indigenous entrepreneurial and not-for-profit organizations, or government, humanitarian and educational enterprises.
Ernest and Patricia Wuliger Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by friends and family of Ernest Wuliger, chairman
of the board of Ohio Mattress Company and Patricia Wuliger, for students of The Darden School who show promise of significant academic
achievement and demonstrated financial need.
Class of 1957 Charles C. Abbott Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by the Class of 1957 in memory of The Darden
School's founding dean. For students at The Darden School who bring a diversity of work experience to the classroom from non-traditional
work backgrounds in areas unique to the applicant pool.
Class of 1958 Charles C. Abbott Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by the Class of 1958 in memory of The Darden
School's founding dean for students at The Darden School.
Class of 1962 Reynolds C. "Bucky" Siersema Memorial Scholarship An endowed scholarship for outstanding students at The Darden
School.
Class of 1965 Scholarship Fund An endowed scholarship for outstanding students at The Darden School.
Class of 1967 Scholarship For outstanding students at The Darden School.
Class of 1968 William E. Fisher Memorial Scholarship An endowed scholarship for outstanding students at The Darden School.
Class of 1970 Scholarship for Creative Management An endowed scholarship established by the Class of 1970 in recognition of
Everard Meade, a retired Darden School lecturer, for second-year M.B.A. students at The Darden School who have exemplified qualities of
creative leadership and have demonstrated need.
Class of 1972 Scholarship Established in 1987 by the Class of 1972, the Killgallon Family Foundation, and the Ohio Art Company
for First Year M.B.A. students.
Class of 1972 Twentieth Reunion Scholarship Established in 1992 by the Class of 1972 as their twentieth reunion gift.
Class of 1974 Fred Richardson Scholarship An endowed scholarship established by the Class of 1974 in memory of a true
gentleman, Fred Richardson, a retired member of The Darden School faculty. For students at The Darden School, with preference to those
with hearing or physical impairments.
Class of 1977 Scholarship An endowed scholarship for outstanding Second Year students at The Darden School.
Class of 1982 Scholarship An endowed scholarship for outstanding students at The Darden School.
Class of 1986 Peter J. Niehaus Memorial Scholarship An endowed scholarship, established by the Class of 1986 in memory of
their classmate for students at the Darden School.
Class of 1987 G. Robert Strauss Marketing Award Fellowship An endowed fellowship awarded annually by the marketing faculty to
a student who exhibits "solid marketing skills, innovative thinking, and compassion for his or her fellow students."
Darden Foundation Scholarships and Fellowships |
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The following scholarships and fellowships are held by the Darden Foundation and adjudicated by the Darden Foundation
Scholarship Board.
Class of 1975 Marianne Quattrocchi Memorial Scholarship Established by the Class of 1975 in memory of their classmate.
Award is to entice female candidates to The Darden School who otherwise might not attend. A scholarship equal to tuition and fees is
awarded to a new student each year such that there would be two Quattrocchi scholars in school (one in the First Year, one in the Second
Year).
Consortium Fellowships [Separate application required through the Consortium] The Consortium is an eleven-member university
alliance designed to increase the enrollment of African American, Hispanic, and Native American students in M.B.A. programs and
ultimately in managerial positions in business. Each candidate who qualifies for admission to a Consortium-member M.B.A. school
competes for a full-tuition fellowship at that school. The Darden Foundation Scholarship Board awards several fellowships each year.
For more information and application materials, contact:
The Consortium for Graduate Study in Management
200 S. Hanley Road Suite 1102
St. Louis, MO 63105-3415
Telephone: (314) 935-6364
El Paso Energy Masters of Business Administration Scholarship Established in 1996 by the Sonat Foundation for The Darden
School. A $15,000 renewable scholarship is offered to an incoming First-Year under-represented student with financial need. The
scholarship is offered in the spring of odd numbered years. The recipient will be known as the El Paso Energy Scholar. Only one is in
effect at any one time.
Hansel Scholarship One $10,000 renewable scholarship awarded biannually to either a minority student or international
student.
Virginia Kincaid Scholarship An endowed scholarship established to honor Virginia Morris Kincaid. This scholarship is
available to female candidates who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents of the United States and who demonstrate an entrepreneurial
spirit, strong leadership skills, and a drive for transformational change.
Charles J. Lewis Scholarship Established in 1985 by Mr. Lemuel E. Lewis, a member of the Board of Managers of the University
of Virginia Alumni Association and a Darden alumnus, in memory of his father, Charles J. Lewis. This scholarship is to be given to
Virginia students, with preference to minorities.
Merrill Lynch Minority Fellowship Established by Merrill Lynch in 2001, this full-tuition and fees fellowship is available to
minority applicants interested in pursuing a career in investment banking. The Merrill Lynch Fellowship offers potential internship
opportunities for the summer between First and Second Years.
J.P. Morgan Fellowships Established in 1997 by Chase Manhattan Bank to assist minority students interested in careers in the
financial services industry. In December 2000, J.P. Morgan & Co. Incorporated and The Chase Manhattan Corporation merged to form J.P.
Morgan Chase & Co. The new company has maintained its legacy commitment to this fellowship program.
John A. Powell Scholarship Established to provide need-based support to under-represented students who have an interest in
wealth creation and entrepreneurial pursuits.
Arnold and Katherine Snider Scholarship Established in 1998 to support a First or Second Year minority student at The Darden
School.
John L. Snook, Jr., Minority Scholarship Established in 1989 by family and friends of John L. Snook, Jr. a former faculty
member of The Darden School. Awarded to minority students with priority given to someone interested in the non-profit section. Awarded
to a Second Year student.
Texaco Fellowships Annual fellowships established in 1999 by Texaco, Inc. Two fellowships will be awarded each year to female
or racially under-represented students. The recipients will be determined based on merit.
Toigo Foundation Fellowship Annual Fellowship sponsored by the Toigo Foundation to connect the best and brightest minority
M.B.A. students attending top programs with the finance industry. Participating universities identify candidates for fellowship.
Following thorough screening by the Associate Director - Fellowships, Board of Directors and alumni, those individuals displaying the
highest levels of academic achievement, personal integrity, demonstrated leadership, community involvement and aptitude for financial
services are selected. Fellowship provides full tuition and offers a mentorship program. Information available: http://www.rtf.org/.
More than 75 percent of Darden students obtain loans to finance all or part of the cost of their Darden education.
Loans are available to enrolled graduate students and range from short-term emergency loans to long-term loans intended to finance
major educational costs. Loan money is available to all students who qualify for it, and prospective students should not be deterred
from applying for admission if they are willing to undertake long-term loans.
For further information, contact the Darden School Financial Aid Office, (434) 924-7739.
M.B.A. Academic Program |
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The Darden School two-year program leading to a degree of Master of Business Administration prepares men and women of high
promise to act as action-oriented graduates who take an enterprise perspective and lead with integrity, vision, judgment,
determination, and social responsibility . This objective is achieved through a uniquely integrated program that provides an
understanding of the fundamental areas of business while it develops the capacity to analyze managerial problems and present
intelligent and resourceful solutions to these problems. Through the study of real business situations, the student is involved
in a breadth and depth of analysis impossible to gain in years of on-the-job training. The M.B.A. program compresses experience.
The Darden case-method approach places significant responsibility for self-development on the individual student. The content and
methodology of the M.B.A. program are carefully planned and coordinated by the faculty, but the students themselves determine the
quality of the learning process in the classroom through their preparation and participation. The program is effective to the extent
that both faculty and students share a commitment to make it work. The Darden School accepts, as an essential function, the goal of
making clear to students their moral responsibilities as administrators, particularly those obligations to the business community and
society at large. The school's concern with moral values continues the ethical tradition of the University of Virginia as expressed in
the Honor System.
The Case Method Darden students learn by doing; they develop their decision-making skills daily in the case method. Each case
presents a real manager with a real decision to make. Included in the case is information on the company and the environment in which it
operates. Each case poses the same question: What would you do? Students are expected to define the issues they identify in the case,
use sound analytical techniques in applying their knowledge to the available data, evaluate the alternatives, make a reasonable decision,
and recommend measures to implement their plan. The procedure simulates the function of modern managers in a wide variety of different
industries, products, processes, and styles of management.
At The Darden School, the learning process depends on the intense, daily preparation of each case by each student. Classroom time is
spent largely in discussion, focusing on the definition, analysis, and a wide range of feasible approaches to a problem. To attain
academic and personal growth in this environment, the student is required to participate in case discussions. During the First Year,
classes are limited to about 60 students to facilitate meaningful participation by all the members of the class. Courses in the Second
Year vary in size, but case discussion is still the chief learning experience. The cases themselves are part of a planned sequence, and
the growth that each student achieves is a result of the total experience, not of learning isolated techniques.
While the case-method philosophy dominates the program, other methodologies are used (role-playing, simulations, field trips, guest
lecturers, and exercises of various sorts) to provide as complete a reflection of reality as possible. This educational experience
blends managerial reality with substantive knowledge and techniques of analysis to equip students to act confidently in a complex world.
Curriculum All of the FirstYear courses are required; the second-year program has one required leadership course to be
selected from a menu of options. No credit is granted for previous course work, and no courses are waived. These courses are fully
coordinated into a single program that becomes more than the sum of its parts. While the courses are formally distinct as outlined in
this catalog, each one contributes more than the basic knowledge of a narrow specialty; it provides an opportunity to use and expand on
knowledge gained in each of the other courses. For example, the problem of determining cost information for a particular product would
normally arise in the study of accounting, but this information has important significance for marketing, for operations management, and
for the interpersonal relations between people in these areas. The significance of the accounting decision for each function would be
treated in accounting; but what might well be a satisfactory solution from the accounting standpoint alone will be modified in the light
of its effect in other areas, and it is this modified solution that the program strives to reach, since it is the one most likely to
work in a real-life situation.
The result of this program is a comprehensive, integrated view of business. M.B.A. students from The Darden School should use their
elective courses to provide depth in the general areas that reflect their career interests.
Graduates of The Darden School are also well informed and conversant with current thinking in the traditional functional areas of
business; they are able to use the quantitative methods of the modern business environment; they understand business applications of the
behavioral sciences; and they have a command of oral and written communication.
With their knowledge and experience of the integrated curriculum, graduates are qualified to assume leadership in the world of
practical affairs at a more rapid pace than would be possible otherwise. They are better equipped to think analytically and
imaginatively, to solve problems, and to make things happen, because they understand both the modern techniques and broad environment of
business nationally and internationally.
The First Year Although the course descriptions that follow suggest a First Year of study consisting of a number of
independent offerings, The Darden School's First Year curriculum is unique in its blending of these ingredients into a program with a
purpose and vitality of its own. The emphasis here is on "program." In a very real sense, Darden M.B.A.s are engaged during their first
year in a nine-month course in the elements of managerial problem solving and decision making'a course that encompasses a knowledge of
analytical techniques, an understanding of the several functional areas of business and their interrelationships, and an appreciation of
the environment in which business functions. The different courses are so integrated that the many skills and attributes of business
management are developed simultaneously.
The course of study assumes little background in formal business education; much of the entering student's initial exposure will
acquaint him or her with the vocabulary and concepts of business - accounting, communications, finance, marketing, organizational
behavior, quantitative analysis, ethics, operations, macroeconomics, and strategy.
From the very outset, however, the attempt is made to show interrelationships among subject areas, to apply concepts that are dealt
with in related courses, and to teach more efficiently by avoiding curricular compartmentalization. Many of the analytical techniques
taught by Quantitative Analysis, for example, will be used immediately by students who face managerial decisions in Operations.
Class schedules reflect particular emphases during the academic year. During weeks in which Quantitative Analysis and Operations meet
frequently, Marketing may not meet at all. In later weeks all courses may meet. Still later the emphasis may be on Marketing and
Organizational Behavior, with no class meetings in Accounting. Such flexibility in scheduling supports and emphasizes the conceptual
flow of the FirstYear program.
To ensure that the FirstYear program is integrated in such a way that relevant material from the various course areas is considered
in the best possible sequence, the FirstYear curriculum is taught as a complete session rather than in two separate semesters. Under the
session system, no semester grades are recorded; a current unofficial "interim grade" is given to each student at the normal semester
break. Formal grades are determined at the end of the nine-month session, by which time the faculty has a clear picture, based on the
complete FirstYear experience, of the student's ability to cope with business problems. The one exception is Accounting. Accounting is
taught in the fall semester only, therefore, a final grade of record is recorded at the end of the fall semester.
The M.B.A. Schedule According to the traditional academic format, the FirstYear program may be said to contain 45 credits, to
be divided among the following courses:
Accounting
Business and the Political Economy
Ethics
Finance
Management Communications
Marketing
Operations
Organizational Behavior
Quantitative Analysis
Strategy
Some courses meet more often than others during the academic year, but all have equal weight for grading purposes.
All graduate business schools promise a challenging program and a rigorous work load; The Darden School is no exception. Potential
students should be prepared to commit 60 to 80 hours each week to their academic endeavors. While the following First Year schedule is
intended only as an example, it does indicate the degree of commitment expected of our students.
Weekdays - FirstYear Program
| 8:00 - 9:25 |
First Class |
| 9:25 - 10:00 |
Coffee |
| 9:50 - 11:25 |
Second Class |
| 11:45 - 1:10 |
Third Class |
| Afternoon |
Prepare cases for next day |
| Evening |
Meet with learning teams |
At the beginning of the year, students are assigned to learning teams of five or six students per group. Teams are fluid and usually
change somewhat during the year because of geographic location of members, friendships, and other factors. The purpose of the teams is
to give members a chance to "try out" ideas on a case before presenting them in class, and to give or receive help as needed. Teams meet
at the school or in the homes of members.
The Second Year The overarching objective of the Second Year is to reinforce the mission of the school as captured in its
Mission Statement. In addition, the following are specific objectives of the Second Year:
- To build on the general management foundation of the First Year by providing students with opportunities to pursue their chosen
areas of interest in greater depth
- To stimulate the design and offering of innovative and relevant leading-edge M.B.A. courses
- To develop leadership capabilities in students;
- To prepare students for lifelong learning and continued professional development
- To support and facilitate the transition of students into the business community
- To support and encourage activities outside the classroom that serve to enhance the Darden community, develop individual
relationships, and foster a sense of social responsibility
While the SecondYear curriculum is an extension and elaboration of the structurally integrated First Year, it allows flexibility in
the selection of elective courses. That flexibility can be used to develop depth in functional expertise or breadth in general management
perspective.
Academic Regulations |
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Standards for the M.B.A. Degree The Darden School requires a minimum performance standard for its M.B.A. graduates. In
addition, the school has performance standards for the FirstYear program, each semester of the M.B.A. program, and each course.
An M.B.A. candidate must ordinarily take the equivalent of 20 course units, receiving grades below B- in no more than 4.5 course
units and no grades of F (certain makeup procedures exist for F grades).
A course meeting 34-40 sessions (each of 85 minutes) in the First Year or 30-34 sessions in the Second Year is defined as one course
unit. A course meeting 16-20 sessions in the First Year or 15-17 sessions in the Second Year constitutes one-half course unit. An
interim grade given at the end of the first semester of the First Year has the course equivalent units of the entire course for
purposes of academic standards.
In administering these standards, the school uses six grades, defined by the faculty as follows: A, excellent; B+, very good; B,
good or satisfactory graduate work; B-, minimum no-penalty grade; C, not satisfactory as general level of work but passing for a
particular course; F, failure. In addition, occasions arise that necessitate assigning a grade that falls outside the standard range.
The symbol IN (incomplete), assigned in such cases implies that, for reasons known to the individual faculty member, an enrolled student
has not completed the work of the course at the end of a specified academic period.
An important element of student performance at The Darden School is classroom participation. Depending on the appraisal criteria of
the instructor and course, classroom participation frequently accounts for up to 50 percent of a student's grade. This proportion
reflects the central role and importance of active engagement by the student in the learning process.
While assessments about classroom participation are incorporated into grades received by students at the end of each term, the
first-year program expects each student to be aware of, and responsible for, her or his participation on an ongoing basis. Although
individual faculty, course faculty, or section faculty may find it appropriate to provide an assessment of student participation during
a term, there is no requirement that they do so on a consistent basis. The responsibility for being informed of the impact one is having
on others resides with the student. Consistent with this philosophy, a student who is uncertain about the value added by participation
in class is expected to initiate discussions with faculty and students who can provide an independent perspective.
Session and Semester Grade Requirements
First Semester, First Year A student who, at the end of the first semester of work, receives final or interim grades below B-
in three or more course units, or a grade of F in courses that have had at least 15 meetings, is required to submit an action plan for
grade improvement. This plan must be submitted prior to registering for spring semester classes and must be acceptable to the Academic
Standards Committee in order to continue in the program.
End of First Year A student who receives a grade of F or grades below B- in three or more course units will be notified by the
Academic Standards Committee, acting on behalf of the faculty, that he or she has failed to meet the standards for continuing the M.B.A.
program. The student may petition the Academic Standards Committee for readmission.
Second Year At the end of the third semester, a student who has received a grade of F or grades below B- in four or more
course units shall be notified by the Academic Standards Committee, acting on behalf of the faculty, that he or she has failed to meet
the standards for continuing the M.B.A. program, but may petition the Academic Standards Committee for readmission.
At the end of the fourth semester, a student who has received a grade of F or grades below B- in five or more course units will not
be recommended for the M.B.A. degree.
In either semester of the Second Year, a student who receives grades below B- in three or more course units shall be notified by the
Academic Standards Committee, acting on behalf of the faculty, that he or she has failed to meet the standards for continuing the M.B.A.
program, but may petition the Academic Standards Committee for readmission.
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