NOVEMBER 2006
Faculty News
Students Honor Three Professors

TEACHERS HONORED: Peter DeMarzo, left, Mary Barth,
and George Parker.
Photo by Saul Bromberger/Sandra Hoover Photography
Professors George Parker, Mary Barth, and Peter DeMarzo,
from the finance and accounting faculty, are the 2006 recipients of awards
presented by Business School students to outstanding faculty members.
MBA students selected Parker, the Dean Witter Professor of Finance and
Management, Emeritus, who has taught at the School for 33 years, to receive
their Distinguished Teaching Award. Doctoral students honored Barth, the
Joan E. Horngren Professor of Accounting and senior associate dean for
academic affairs, and fellows in the Sloan Program feted DeMarzo, the Mizuho
Financial Group Professor of Finance.
Parker’s Corporate Finance “course was one of the most fun courses I
have taken,” shared one student. Another wrote: “[He] was amazingly gifted
at making [this subject] accessible to everyone, from the strongest quant
jock to the serious poet. Although I had him in an 8 a.m. class, I looked
forward to his class every day.”
In honoring Barth, who received the MBA teaching award in 1996 not long
after joining the School faculty, doctoral students praised her supportive
relationship with them while recognizing she also holds an influential role
on the International Accounting Standards Board. “You could consider her the
Michael Jordan of accounting,” one student quipped. Another student called
Barth a “role model for me in my career.”
Sloan fellows honored DeMarzo, who also won the honor from 2004 Sloan
fellows. Wrote one student: “He took an extremely complex course and managed
brilliantly across an array of abilities [of individual students]. The class
was fun, demanding, and extremely informative. I am finding subsequent
finance courses easier because of the foundation he gave us.”
A Successor to ‘Built to Last’
Professor Emeritus Jerry Porras is coauthor of a new book, Success Built to Last: Creating a Life That Matters (Wharton School Publishing). The coauthor of an earlier best seller, Built to Last, which looked at corporate success, Porras now looks at successful people and creates a set of practices to transform life and work. The book draws on conversations with CEOs, national leaders, Nobel laureates—both celebrities and unsung heroes who’ve achieved lasting impact without obvious power or charisma.
Spence Heads World Bank Commission
Business School Dean Emeritus A. Michael Spence was selected to head a new independent Commission on Growth and Development created by the World Bank in conjunction with the governments of Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. “The members of this commission are all distinguished practitioners who are committed to our shared goal of closing the income gap between rich and poor countries,” said World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz. Among the commission’s 20 members is Business School alumnus John Browne, Sloan ’81, CEO of BP.
New Faces, Ideas on the Faculty
Six newcomers to the faculty this year include three in organizational
behavior, and one each in accounting, leadership, and international
business.
The four tenure-track faculty are Anne Beyer, Francis Flynn, Elizabeth
Mullen, and Jesper Sørensen. New lecturers are Laurence C. Franklin, JD/MBA
’75, and Evelyn Williams.
Anne Beyer, assistant professor of accounting, completed her doctorate at
Northwestern University in June. With academic interests in financial
reporting and disclosure, incentives and contracting, and financial
analysts’ earnings forecasts, she will teach Financial Accounting.
Francis Flynn, associate professor of organizational behavior, was
previously an associate professor at the Columbia Business School. His
research focuses on two related areas of inquiry: how people can derive
social influence from episodes of cooperation, and how individual
differences can serve as sources of social influence. A graduate of the
University of California, Berkeley, he will teach the MBA core course in
organizational behavior.
Elizabeth Mullen, assistant professor of organizational behavior, was a
visiting assistant professor and fellow at Northwestern’s Dispute Resolution
Research Center in the Kellogg School of Management. Her research interests
are distributive and procedural justice; resource allocation; affect and
cognition; and negotiation and conflict resolution. She holds a doctoral
degree in social psychology from the University of Chicago and will teach
Conflict Management Negotiation.
Jesper Sørensen, associate professor of organizational behavior, was most
recently an associate professor at the Sloan School of Management, MIT. His
research at the intersection of labor market processes and
macro-organizational theory looks at the role of individuals in
organizations: addressing how individual characteristics impact
organizational behavior, and how organizational characteristics influence
organizational behavior and thus individual labor market outcomes. He holds
a doctorate from Stanford’s sociology department and will teach Strategic
Management and a doctoral course.
Laurence Franklin, lecturer in international business, has extensive
teaching experience in law and MBA programs. His interests are investments,
venture capital, investment banking, China, and business law. He will teach
two courses, one each for the Business and Law schools.
Evelyn Williams, lecturer in management, is also director of the Business
School’s Leadership Development Platform for MBA students and associate
director of the Center for Leadership Development and Research. She was the
faculty chair responsible for the University of Chicago’s LEAD program and a
clinical associate professor. Her work focuses on executive leadership
education, training design, group process, team dynamics, and organizational
behavior.
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Faces in the News

Anne Beyer

John Browne

Francis Flynn

Laurence Franklin

Elizabeth Mullen

Jesper Sørensen

Michael Spence

Evelyn Williams