Thursday, July 9, 2020

UCLA Anderson Student Interview Enjoying the MBA Whirlwind

This interview is the latest in an Accepted.com blog series featuring  interviews with current MBA students, offering readers a behind-the-scenes look at  top MBA programs. And now for a chat with Tom Winterton, a first year student at UCLA Anderson. Accepted: Wed like to get to know you! Where are you from? Where and what did you study as an undergrad? What was your most recent pre-MBA job? Tom: I grew up in Nantwich, a small market town in north of England and completed my undergraduate degree in Physics with Finance at the University of Surrey. A slightly unusual combination but it stood me well in getting a job in financial services in London where I worked for a number of banks. My last role was as a Strategy Development Analyst at Brewin Dolphin, one of the UK’s largest investment management and financial planning firms. Accepted: Where are you currently in business school? What year? I’m a 1st year full time MBA at the UCLA Anderson School of Management in Los Angeles. Accepted: Whats your favorite thing about Anderson? And if you could change one thing about the program, what would it be? Tom: My favorite thing about Anderson would have to be the school’s culture of shared success. Be it 2nd year students paying it forward through the career sessions they run, to the fact that MBAs competing for intern and full time positions regularly prep together ahead of interviewing for the same role. This supporting environment couldn’t be more different from uber competitive experience often associated with business school. While everyone is certainly pushing to land top positions at some of the most sought after companies, its important our class mates get there too and everyone’s committed to this principal of shared success. They try to pack a lot into the MBA course and that’s especially true in your first few quarters. On top of that, UCLA operates on a quarter systems which seems to only compound this busy schedule. If I could change one thing about the program it would be to start a bit earlier in the year and give 1st year students a little more time in the first quarter. I found this a big crunch time with recruiting and finals all in full swing. You find yourself living inside the business school bubble, neglecting friends from home as you become obsessed by informationals, GPAs, interview prep and all things MBA. Accepted: Now that youve well into your first year of b-school, can you talk about your transition back to school? Is b-school what you thought it would be like? Any surprises? Any advice for next years incoming class? Tom: It fair to say I’ve found the transition back to school at bit of a shock to the system. If it were only about being back in the class room that would be one thing, but the truth is you end up having to perform a juggling act skipping between company presentation, case competitions, sorting out the administrative nightmare that comes with moving countries, informational interviews, group assignments and much more in between. Plus of course socializing with everyone in your new MBA class. Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) means for the first few months at least you’re compelled to sign up to as many things as possible. Often the academic work ends up being just one point on a long list of priorities. My advice to incoming MBA students would be to clear the decks before your MBA. If you’ve got the time to get ahead with career research do so. Start doing informational interviews and building connections with companies you’re interested in as early as possible; it will pay dividends when it comes to recruiting. While the MBA experience is great, be prepared, it’s a whirlwind. Don’t expect to have many evening or weekends to yourself, and let friends and family know they’re about to see a lot less of you. Accepted: Do you plan on heading back to the UK after you receive your MBA? What are your post-MBA plans Tom: I haven’t decided where I want to be after my MBA. Much of it will depend on how the recruiting process goes, my summer internship and the connections I’m able to make over the two years. That said studying at a US school, MBA recruiting is obviously skewed toward American companies, with a large proportion of students getting full time jobs through on campus recruiting. California is home to so many of the world’s most innovative businesses and I’ll certainly be exploring all the opportunities it has to offer. Accepted: Whats your favorite class so far? Tom: I would have to say Marketing has been my favorite class so far. For the first few quarters your timetable at Anderson (like most MBA programs) is dominated by a core class – Accounting, Finance, Statistics, etc. While these were great, well taught with lively debate and new interesting content, I had some experience of them from my undergraduate degree and professional career. While Marketing is still a core class, I came into it with almost no background whatsoever and I’m enjoying being exposed to a whole new strand of business. I also enjoyed that fact that as opposed to my other core class there isn’t necessarily one right answer when it comes to Marketing. Different approaches, targeting different segments of the market can both be effective. There’s really room to be creative as you look for the best way to market a product. While I wouldn’t say I had a favorite assignment, it was interesting writing a â€Å"Positioning Statement† for yourself, in the context of a job market, dating market or otherwise. Accepted: Can you share your top 3 MBA admissions tips with our applicant readers? Tom: †¢ Really think about why you want an MBA and how it will help reach your future goals. Every school will ask this as one of their essay questions and you need to have a good answer that makes sense. This story becomes even more important as an MBA, when you start talking to companies and applying for internships. Recruiters need to see how your skill and experience fit together and relate to the role your applying for. †¢ Don’t just look at the rankings when applying to programs; sure they matter but only up to until a point. Instead I’d recommend looking on where a school’s MBAs interned and accepted full time positions. Do the companies you’re interested in recruit on campus? Does the school have strong alumni connections in the industries and with the firms you wanting to work for? A big part of the recruiting process is getting to know companies, networking and for companies to get to know you. You’re at a big advantage if your school already has those connections. †¢ If you’re able to, visit the school and sit in on a class or two. At a very minimum make sure you speak to alumni and current students; they’re the best source of advice when it comes to applying to a school. While I wasn’t able to visit Los Angeles before applying to Anderson, I was able to speak to a number of current alumni. I also had good friends who’d attended UCLA as undergraduates. This was invaluable when making my decision. Remember where you’re living will be a big factor in your MBA experience. Accepted: Can you tell us about your blog? When and why did you start blogging? What have you gained from the experience? Tom: I had to check the dates, I started my current blog some 2.5 years back now, with my first post in May 2012. I’d also experimented with a couple of other blogs and websites prior to this. I think the initial interest came about went I was working on a project to develop online services for a bank. Working with developers I decided should really know a bit more about how to build a website, having learned little to nothing in school. The blog developed out of this curiosity, I liked the thought of creating content and sharing it online, as well as experimenting learning bits of CSS and HTML to customize the site along the way. What have I gained from my experience blogging? Well it’s really been an ongoing learning experience for me. From picking the basics of markup languages and web styling, to finding out more about different web services by experimenting with things like Google Analytics and Adwords. I’ve used it as a public record of what I’ve been up to, from hiking in Switzerland to my sharing my MBA orientation week experience; it’s a great way to add context and tell a story with the photos you’ve taken. If nothing else it’s fed my curiosity and added a few lines to the interests section of my resume. For one-on-one guidance on your b-school application, please see our MBA Application Packages.   You can read more about Tom’s journey by checking out his blog, Tom’s Blog. Thank you Tom for sharing your story with us – we wish you loads of luck! Related Resources: †¢Ã‚  MBA Rankings: What You Need to Know †¢Ã‚  UCLA Anderson 2015 MBA Questions, Deadlines, Tips

Thursday, July 2, 2020

The Crucible as an Allegory - Literature Essay Samples

In his classic drama The Crucible, Arthur Miller chronicles the horror of the Salem witch trials, an embarrassing episode of colonial Americas history. At first reading, one might only view Millers work as a vivid account of the tragedy of theocracy in Americas late seventeenth century. However, with an understanding of the period in which Miller penned his work, one can easily view the witch trials of The Crucible as an authentic allegory of the Red Scare of the 1950s in America by drawing parallels in settings, characters, and the pervasive paranoia of both societies.To begin with, although centuries apart, the two periods have several dramatic similarities in regards to setting. Seventeenth century colonial America was a mysterious, quite often frightening destination for those who had risked the perils of a voyage from England to make a life for themselves to a New World. For these Puritan settlers of The Crucible, their new home of Salem touches the edge of the wilderness and ap pears [] dark and threatening, over their shoulders night and day, for out of it Indian tribes marauded from time to time (Miller 5). In comparison to these colonial emigrants in search of a land where they could enjoy a life free of persecution are the many European emigrants who flooded American soil in the late 1940s and early 1950s. These modern day emigrants, like their colonial counterparts, arrived on a new continent, one quite alien from the European countries that many of them had fled. Certainly, Miller had not only the obvious comparison of setting but also the distinct similarities of characters in mind when he structured his allegory.Furthering the argument to support The Crucible as an allegory is the uncanny resemblance between the antagonists and protagonists from Millers work and the real life villains and heroes of the Red Scare. Obviously, Judge Hathorne and Deputy Governor Danforths unyielding authority in the Salem witch trials is reminiscent of all who held pos ition of power on the Committee for Un-American Activities. Just as twentieth century Senator Joseph McCarthy and his cronies believed that any semblance of Communism was a threat to Americas freedom, Danforth fears that there is a moving plot to topple Christ in the country! and that this plot must be eradicated (Miller 98). In addition to these narrow-minded antagonists from both periods are the free thinkers, who choose not to implicate any of their contemporaries in these witch hunts. Certainly the outspoken John Proctor who speak[s] [his] own sins but will not judge another because he has no tongue for it, is symbolic of Arthur Miller himself as well as those of the artistic community who refused to implicate their friends as reds when the paranoia over communist infiltrators continued to mount (Miller 141).Finally and most importantly, it is this paranoia, common to both stories, that offers the strongest argument for the fact that Miller intends his work as an allegory. Post World War America was still recovering from the evils of Hitler when the threat of Communism began to seep into American society. Sadly, Senator McCarthy, with the zealous belief that the slightest hint of communism would rob America of its freedoms, became so fanatical that he and his committee succeeded in frightening most American citizens. Just as McCarthy compiled his black list of artists, who had done absolutely nothing un-American, Reverend Hale of Millers work feeds the colonists hysteria with his pronouncement that [] the Devil is alive in Salem, and we dare not quail to follow wherever the accusing finger points (Miller 71). Ironically, in both cases, the very leaders who set out to protect the beliefs and rights of their people instead violated those rights to the extreme by feeding the hysteria with their paranoid attitudes.Arthur Millers play certainly depicts a tragic time in American history while offering the audience a vivid account of the misguided notions of a th eocracy. However, there is no doubt that Millers ulterior motive in writing this account was to have it serve as an allegory for the traumatic witch hunts of the 1950s. Through his obvious parallels in both characters and setting as well as the treatment of the paranoia from both periods, Arthur Miller has created a masterful allegory in his play The Crucible.