UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Normally, Penn State’s online master of business administration (MBA) kicks off with a residency at the University Park campus, where the new students participate in team-building exercises and network with one another and the faculty. Penn State’s online master’s in supply chain management program normally welcomes students each summer for a residency, too.
However, the coronavirus pandemic has forced these programs, which are led by Penn State’s Smeal College of Business and offered online through Penn State World Campus, to adapt their in-person residencies to take place virtually, through Zoom.
Almost 300 graduate business students will be participating in the residences this year. More than 60 students in the Penn State Online MBA participated in a virtual residency in May, and more than 150 will attend the next one, in August at the start of the fall 2020 semester. About 85 students in the master of supply chain management attended the virtual residency in two groups last week.
“Bringing 60 strangers together online, conveying high levels of enthusiasm and imparting a sense of community all while delivering exceptional material with no hiccups or IT issues was something of a miracle,” said Sean Kenney, one of the students in the virtual MBA residency in May. “It was an incredibly impressive team collaboration.”
The four days of the virtual MBA residency started at 10 a.m. ET to accommodate students in other time zones. Session topics were lectures about team processes as part of the course, Business Administration 810: Team Performance, presentations from guest speakers and group activities, such as a workshop on improvisation and storytelling in business, to foster teamwork.
Kenney, a regional manager for an independent craft brewery, said he was impressed by how the residency came together in a virtual format for the first time.
“We were never sitting for long before a breakout session was initiated, a discussion opened up or a new instructor jumped in,” said Kenney, who joined from his home in Santa Barbara, California. “There seemed to be excellent awareness of the challenges of maintaining engagement over long periods in a virtual setting. It made me feel like I made the right choice.”
Stacey Dorang Peeler, managing director for the online MBA, said each session had almost 100% attendance. She said they recorded each session so that attendees who had to step away, such as for childcare or work, could review what they missed.