The items in this section represent a sample of recent media coverage about Tuck Executive Education's Back in Business program.
10/29/07
FT.COM
Back in Business alumna Beth Noymer Levine talks about her reasons for
attending the program and the unqualified success that it was. "The
bottom line for me is that, even a year ago, I would have told you that
my best, most exciting career years were behind me, but now, without
question, I know that my best years are ahead of me," she said.
10/16/07
CNN.COM
Business education isn't only for those seeking to get their first foothold on the corporate ladder. This is something recognized by increasing numbers of business schools, among them the well-regarded Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire.
10/5/07
THE NEW YORK TIMES
During the last few years, some of the nation’s premier business schools began to address that demographic group with executive MBA programs. Of those, perhaps the most encompassing is the annual program started last fall by the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, with a curriculum that combined academics and career opportunities.
10/5/07
INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
More than a year ago, some of the premier business schools in the United States began to address that demographic group with executive master's degree programs. Of those, perhaps the most encompassing is the annual one started last autumn by the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth in New Hampshire, with a curriculum that combined academics and career opportunities.
9/2/07
THE BOSTON GLOBE
Mom, the next corporate titan. Hungry for talent, big companies have started to pursue women who have dropped out of the workforce. Elite business schools like Dartmouth's Tuck School and the Harvard Business School have programs similar to Wharton's, and the how-tos of finding and hiring women coming off a career break—women who are 'onramping,' in the current human-resources parlance—are hot topics in business school classrooms.
Fall 2007
BUSINESSWEEK.COM
Professor Anant Sundaram talks about how the Tuck School's Back in Business program is trying to alter companies' reluctance to hire women who return to the workforce after a long leave of absence.
9/8/2006
ABC NEWS
Dartmouth College's Tuck School of Business launches a new program called "Back in Business: Invest in Your Return." The intensive, 11-day program will be held in New York City and at Dartmouth's campus in Hanover, N.H. The pilot class of around 35 participants is made up mostly of women returning to work after raising children. In an interview with ABC News, Anant Sundaram, the program's faculty director and a professor, said the vast majority of the participants have MBAs but that "we have some outstanding admittees who have majors in literature, majors in political science, [and] who have gone on to excellent corporate careers."
5/11/2006
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Some of the country's top business schools are discovering a new niche: stay-at-home moms. Seeking to tap a pool of professionals who are of increasing interest to employers, Harvard, Dartmouth, and other graduate business programs are launching executive-education courses geared toward women who have put their careers on hold to raise families and are ready to return to the professional world. This fall Dartmouth College's Tuck School of Business is launching an intensive 11-day program titled "Back in Business: Invest in Your Return."
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