VoLuME LI
ISSuE XII
SuMMEr 2011
WWW.BEntLEYVanguard.CoM
VP of Student Affairs Dr. Yorkis retires Larson Dean Shepardson will absorb responsibilities and join President’s Cabinet By Tomer Gat ManagIng EdItor
after 25 years at Bentley university, dr. Kathleen Yorkis, vice president of Student affairs, will be retiring. dr. Yorkis first joined Bentley in 1986 as the dean of Student affairs after working as the director of Career Services at Loyola university and director of Professional development at Coopers & Lybrand (now called PricewaterhouseCoopers). She was appointed chief Student affairs officer in 1999 and has held the vice president position since 2001. “It is very difficult to leave Bentley,” said dr. Yorkis. “However, I am very See YORKIS, Page 5
By Jon McColgan Vanguard Staff
After 25 years of serving the Bentley Community, Dr. Kathleen Yorkis will be retiring at the end of the school year.
Tomer Gat/THE VANGUARD
New York Times doubts business students’ efforts David Glenn asserts that low GMAT scores are a result of lack of academic rigor By Lacey Nemergut nEWS EdItor
The New York Times recently published an article entitled “the default Major: Skating through B-School.” the article, written by david glenn, focused on the apparent simplicities involved with a business education and the ease in which a student can receive their undergraduate degree. glenn referenced his collected investigative research, suggesting that Business students score lowest on the gMat entry examination due to the
lack of rigor in their college curriculum. Specifically, glenn chose to focus on the light load of work associated with both Managing and Marketing Majors, frequently engaged in abstract group projects. “Business majors spend less time preparing for class than do students in any other broad field, according to the most recent national Survey of Student Engagement: nearly half of seniors majoring in business say they spend fewer than 11 hours a week studySee TIMES, Page 7
CaMPuS LIfE EdItor
father Claude, Bentley’s Catholic priest and director of Spiritual Life for the last 11 years, has made the choice to step down at the end of this semester. father Claude will visit rome and then devote his time to his position on the Board of trustees at assumption College. Both father Claude
8 CITY YEAR Seven students revealed as next year’s City Year corps members.
and reverend Katrina arrived at the same time in august 2000, and will be leaving for different purposes this year. after being sent to Bentley by his religious order, father Claude said, “this assignment was really a surprise to me. My training is not at all in business, and I haven’t had much to do with business, so coming to a business school was rather daunting.”
after her own four-year experience on Bentley’s campus, President gloria Larson sat down with The Vanguard to reflect not only on the past, but also on where Bentley is heading next, both in the short and long term. “these four years have flown by, and it has been a truly amazing experience,” said Larson. “this has been the most personally meaningful of all my career stops, given Bentley involves training the future leaders of industry and business.” When asked what her greatest accomplishments at Bentley are, Larson preferred to examine the accomplish-
Courtesy of progressive-patriot.com
this just shows the amount of power and responsibility father Claude has graciously held for the last 11 years. after arriving on campus, he worked diligently toward broadening the Spirit Life team to be all inclusive for all religions, and was fortunate to find those people. “the Spiritual Life team has
ments as successes which all of Bentley achieved as a whole. “the community has reached many milestones, from becoming a university, which speaks volumes to audiences across the globe about our direction, to the EQuIS accreditation and being named one of the top-10 schools to combine business and liberal arts by the Stanford Carnegie foundation, Bentley has been on the move forward,” said Larson. “and let’s not forget everything our students have
See CLAUDE, Page 5
See LARSON, Page 16
The article compares business students to those of other majors regarding time spent studying.
Courtesy of indiana.edu
Spiritual Life leaders bid farewell to Bentley By Sindhu Palaniappan
reflects on past & future as Bentley President
“fortunately, I met some very interesting people here who are very supportive of my particular mission on campus as director of Spiritual Life and the Catholic Chapter here,” said Claude. Surprisingly to father Claude, and probably to many of you, half of Bentley’s undergraduate campus is Catholic. It has been this way for the 11 years that he has been here.
3 COMMENCEMENT CNN political analyst to speak.
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