Andrea Aiello, associate dean for academic and student services in Clark’s GSOM Clark University’s Graduate School of Management (GSOM) was among 50 business schools nationwide represented at a forum on women in business hosted by The White House. The White House Working Families Business Schools Convening, organized by the Council on Women and Girls and the Council of Economic Advisers, explored ways business schools can collaborate with the business community to ensure success for women and to encourage diversity in American workplaces. The event brought together education and business leaders for discussions on recruiting, training, and retaining female workers, and focused on the importance of implementing family-friendly policies in the workplace. “Business schools play a critical role in educating the workers and leaders of the 21st-century workforce,” said Andrea Aiello, associate dean for academic and student services, who attended the event. “More needs to be done to encourage and ensure women’s success in the workplace; Clark’s GSOM is well-suited to help address this problem.” The Council provided concrete strategies for business schools to help women succeed throughout school and their careers and to build a business school experience that prepares students for the workforce of tomorrow. These best practices focus on four key areas:
- ensuring access to business schools and business careers;
- building a business school experience that prepares students for the workforce of tomorrow;
- ensuring career services that go beyond the needs of traditional students; and
- exemplifying how organizations should be run.