Board Fellows: making an impact and growing managerial skills
Johnnie Mobley discovered the UW Business and Economic Development Center Board Fellows Program during his second year as an evening MBA student. Mobley was looking... Read More
Hammering man: John White
Inventor of mammoth machines, reinvents himself in the Foster EMBA Program You could call John White (EMBA 2012) many things. Inventor. Entrepreneur. Scholar. Philanthropist. Restorer... Read More
Dinner and discussion and classes… oh my!
Ally Wewers, TMMBA Program Coordinator Last Tuesday’s “Taste of TMMBA” was a busy night for prospective students here at the Eastside Executive Center in Kirkland. ... Read More
New Foster Club Supports Veterans
Military veterans typically constitute a small but unique subset of MBA students at the Foster School of Business. In recent years, however, this number has... Read More
Singapore, China: Excites, Adventures and More
Guest post by Xiaoyuan Su (TMMBA Class 2012) As a native Chinese, this International Study Tour to Singapore and China is special to me, as... Read More
Does it get easier? Five stories from 2nd Years
The myth of business school is that life gets easier in your second year. While life may not necessarily get easier, it definitely changes, mostly... Read More
Net Impact Conference in Portland
On October 27, 2011, Foster Net Impact sent 55 students (including 1st & 2nd year full-time and evening) to the 19th National Net Impact Conference... Read More
Lance Young wins 2011 PACCAR Award for Excellence in Teaching
Lance Young, an assistant professor of finance at the University of Washington Foster School of Business, has received the 2011 PACCAR Award for Excellence in... Read More
Fong wins University of Washington Distinguished Teaching Award
Christina Ting Fong, an assistant professor of management and organization at the Foster School of Business, has won this year’s University of Washington Distinguished Teaching... Read More
Building Lifelong Connections
I remember EPRIME weekend like it was yesterday. Mostly, I remember a blur of faces and names, handshakes and smiles, and a whole lot of advice. We were... Read More