School of Management, HIT

School of Management, HIT (Chinese: 哈尔滨工业大学管理学院) is the business school of Harbin Institute of Technology. It has three campuses, including Harbin campus, Weihai campus and Shenzhen campus.

School of Management,
Harbin Institute of Technology
TypeBusiness school
Established1920
Parent institution
Harbin Institute of Technology
AffiliationSee list for affiliations
DeanQiang Ye(叶强)
Academic staff
213
Undergraduates793
Postgraduates455
396
Location, ,
China
Websitesom.hit.edu.cn/EN_Som/index.html

There are approximately 213 full—time faculty members consisting of assistant, associate, and full professors.[1]

History

School of Management, HIT is one of the oldest business school in China.[1] The school traces its origins to 1920, when several institutes were merged to form a single School of Management. The earliest courses offered included engineering economics, transportation economics and railway administration. During the 1950s, the school received strategic support from scholars from the Soviet Union, and pioneered the teaching and research of management and economics in China. A large number of scholars and government officials graduated from this school.

MBA Programs

The MBA program of School of Management, HIT received accreditation from Association of MBAs, and is the first accredited business school in Northeast China.[2]

Big Data & BA Summer School

Big Data & BA Summer School is a one-week training program.[3] Scholars and professionals of information system, FinTech, Marketing and related areas are invited as faculty members to lecture on research methodologies and cutting-edge topics of big data and business analytics. The professors include Anindya Ghose, Arun Rai, Qiang Ye and Yong Tan.

gollark: Honestly, I think that in many applications arbitrary-size packets map better to what you're doing than streams.
gollark: Apart from the address caching.
gollark: Huh, I checked the Minitel L3 protocol docs and it apparently does rednet-style "routing" too.
gollark: See, that's very not ideal.
gollark: You don't have an accurate map, though, and you have devices which might randomly be moving around, or ones which drop out unexpectedly, or ones which can't hold much of a routing table due to limited RAM, or ones which are doing evil things.

References

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