How Yale SOM Is Going Hybrid For MBAs This Fall

Yale School of Management will officially open its doors to MBA students on campus on Monday

When MBA students begin their classes at Yale University’s School of Management on Aug. 31, they will opt into an unprecedented learning experience: an unusual hybrid format. The goal of this blend of in-person classwork and virtual learning will be to recreate some semblance of an MBA experience during a health crisis that has upended nearly every aspect of life.

For the better part of the past four months, Yale SOM faculty, staff and students have been meeting to plan just how this experiment will turn out. The result of all that planning is an elaborate and complex scheme of courses accompanied by a set of now-familiar safety guidelines that include face coverings, social distancing, hand washing, and strict limits on face-to-face interaction. What MBA students actually experience will vary from core to elective courses, the continued spread of the virus and and their own creativeness in virtually recreating social functions from clubs and conferences to corporate info sessions and employer interviews.

While certainties are elusive at a time when things can change overnight, the business school is hoping to deliver about 25% of its first year classes in-person, with a more balanced 50-50 split for second year electives. SOM expects to enroll roughly 345 full-time MBA students this fall, the same number of incoming students last year, though an estimated 10% to 15% of the class who can’t yet get to campus will start online. Evans Hall, the expansive home of Yale SOM, will be used only for academic purposes. Students can only enter the building when they have scheduled classes. No social gatherings will be allowed in the building or on its grounds.

‘WE ARE TRYING VERY HARD TO MAKE THE EXPERIENCE RICH AND MEANINGFUL’

Sherilyn Scully, assistant dean for academic affairs and student life

“I am hopeful we will be able to deliver something that is somewhat normal because we did it in the spring with student events and a major healthcare conference that went online,” says Sherilyn Scully, assistant dean for academic affairs and student life. “We understand that is what we have to do right now and make it the best it can be. We are trying very hard to make those events rich and meaningful to people who are attending virtually.”

Every core course in the first-year MBA curriculum will be assigned a classroom and students in each of the five cohorts will be divided into ‘A’ and ‘B’ groups. Each student will attend at most one class session each week in person, participating in the remaining sessions remotely. MBA students in group ‘A’ will attend in person on Mondays and Tuesdays, while ‘B’ students will attend in person on Wednesdays and Thursdays. All students in Evans Hall will be required to wear a mask at all times and to maintain a minimum of 6 feet of social distance from others both inside classrooms and in the building’s common spaces.