Organization and research As part of the larger institution of BYU, the Marriott School is ultimately administered by
BYU's president and board of trustees. Under them, the school is directly managed by a dean (currently Brigitte C. Madrian), who is advised by three associate deans and the school's advisory council. The school has nine academic departments, each overseen by a
department chair. The Marriott School student body has its own
student council, which serves an umbrella organization for Marriott School clubs. The school houses student chapters for national associations including the
Society for Human Resource Management, the Collegiate Entrepreneurs' Organization,
Rotaract, and
Net Impact. There is also a chapter of the honorary association
Beta Alpha Psi. Faculty are grouped in one or more of seven "academic areas": accounting, business management (including management communication, business law, and international business), finance, information systems, organizational leadership and strategy, public management, and experience design and management. The school is also home to four research centers that organize research in different fields of business administration and establish liaisons between the Marriott School and the corporate world. Both undergraduate and graduate students may be invited to work as
teaching and
research assistants, and some MAcc students teach accounting classes during the spring or summer terms, as well as at the
BYU's Salt Lake Center. However, research productivity is hampered by the fact that the Marriott School has no doctoral programs, and therefore, no doctoral students focused on research. The Marriott School faculty was ranked #64 nationally and #71 globally in 2008 for its research productivity in the
UTD Top 100 Business School Research Ranking. The Marriott School oversees two perennial publications:
Economic Self-Reliance (a semi-annual, practitioner-focused publication that highlights research and best practices) and
Marriott Alumni Magazine (a tri-annual publication that showcases innovative business research and ideas as well as news from the school and alumni). The MSM is accredited by the
Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.
Curriculum and degrees offered of the
Tanner Building's east wing The Marriott School offers ten Bachelor of Science degree programs: Accounting, Finance,
Information Systems, Global Supply Chain Management, Marketing, Human Resource Management, Strategic Management, Entrepreneurial Management, Experience Design and Management, and Business Management. Seven minors are also offered: Business, Entrepreneurship, Global Business and Literacy, Healthcare Leadership, Information Systems, Global and Community Impact, and Strategy. The school offers six graduate degrees: the MAcc, MBA,
EMBA,
EMPA,
MISM, and MPA. MBA students choose a major (Finance, Marketing, Supply Chain Management,
OBHR, or Product Development) and a minor (Entrepreneurship, International Business, Strategy) if desired. MAcc students choose either audit, tax, or PhD Prep. Matriculation into the Marriott School as an undergraduate requires an application independent from normal acceptance to BYU. Once in the program, students go through a one-semester "core" where students in the block are in the same classes together as teams. All undergraduates must also complete a one-semester mentoring program where each student selects a Marriott School alumnus to converse with over the course of the semester. For the 2014–2015 school year, Marriott School tuition for full-time LDS undergraduates is $2,500 per semester; for Marriott School graduate students, it is $5,810 per semester. All Marriott School students may apply for several school-specific and university-wide financial aid opportunities. Some are program-specific, others are need-based. The
Hawes Scholars program is the highest scholarship distinction given to MBA students at the school. The program awards $10,000 to second-year students who are nominated by students or faculty, and who are then selected based on academic performance, leadership maturity, and a commitment to high ethical standards. All Marriott School students may also earn the
Global Management Certificate. To earn the certificate, students are required to take a business language course, pertinent international business classes, and participate in an international field study or study abroad program. Undergraduate students may also qualify for graduation honors.
University Honors is the highest distinction BYU awards its graduates. Overseen by
Honors Program, the distinction requires students to complete an honors curriculum requirement, a Great Works requirement, an Advanced Languages requirement, a service requirement, an honors thesis requirement, a graduation portfolio that summarizes the student's honors experiences—all while maintaining at least a 3.5 GPA. The university also awards
Latin scholastic distinctions: summa cum laude, top 1 percent; magna cum laude, top 5 percent; and cum laude, top 10 percent.
Rankings, awards, and admissions Many of the Marriott School's degree programs have received high rankings from independent sources. In 2014, the Marriott School's undergraduate programs were ranked #13 by
BusinessWeek. The Marriott School's MBA program received rankings from several sources for 2016–2017: #23 ranking by
BusinessWeek, #17 by
Forbes, and #27 by
U.S. News & World Report. Among regional schools the program was ranked #1 by ''
The Wall Street Journal's
most recent ranking (2007); and among business schools worldwide the MBA program was ranked #93 for 2014 by Financial Times. The undergrad program was also ranked #2 for return on investment (BusinessWeek
, 2013) and #2 for its emphasis on ethics (The Wall Street Journal'', 2007). The Marriott School's
accounting program is the only program in the country to receive the
American Accounting Association's
Innovation in Accounting Education Award twice. The first award, received in 1993, was for the development of an integrated approach to teaching accounting. The second award, received in 2007, was for the development of a
PhD Prep Track to prepare MAcc students to enroll in a PhD program after graduation. For 2013, the bachelor's degree in the School of Accountancy received two #3 rankings, one by
Public Accounting Report and the other by
U.S. News & World Report. The same two reporting agencies also ranked the school's MAcc program #2 and #7 in the nation, respectively. The Information Systems department was ranked #26 in the nation in 2003 for research, and its MISM program was ranked "among the top ten" by
TechRepublic in 2008. The Marriott School is one of the few colleges at BYU that requires application from undergraduate students post-matriculation to the university itself. In addition to essays and pre-baccalaureate academics, students are evaluated on performance in 13 credit hours of "pre-management" coursework at BYU. For 2008, the MSM admitted 69 percent of undergraduate applicants, comprising a class of 1,783 students. ==People==