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TIME Magazine Names UT Austin Among U.S.’ Best Colleges for Future Leaders

Excerpted from article in UT News

TIME Magazine named UT Austin as one of the Best Colleges for Future Leaders in the United States. UT earned the No. 14 ranking, which was highest among Texas universities and third highest among all public schools. This achievement reflects UT’s continued commitment to becoming the world’s highest-impact public research university.

TIME and Statista looked at the resumes of 2,000 top leaders in the country to see where they earned their degrees. The analysis included politicians, CEOs, union leaders, Nobel winners and more across various sectors. Notably, the research found many schools to make the list featured exceptional business and law programs, two areas where UT shines. The McCombs School of Business (No. 20 in U.S. World News & Report) and the School of Law (No. 16 in U.S. News & World Report) were listed as strong programs under the University’s inclusion on the list.

The ranking notes “what distinguishes these schools, experts say, is not necessarily that they teach students to be better leaders, but that alums receive more opportunities, and many companies have a vested interested in hiring them. Whatever a student may have learned at school, an elite diploma signals at least two things to prospective employers: survival of a difficult admissions process and a high likelihood of intelligence.”

UT Austin Closed for Winter Break

The University of Texas at Austin will be closed for winter break from December 23, 2023 through January 1, 2024. Contact MPA Admissions if you have questions or need assistance with your application. We will reply as soon as we return from the break.

Enjoy the holidays!

Zoom Boom: MPA Alumna Kelly Steckelberg, CFO

Kelly Steckelberg (MPA ’91) has always looked for opportunities to learn something new. Four years ago, she joined a company called Zoom. Then the pandemic hit. Here’s how Zoom’s CFO managed the company’s whirlwind year.

Kelly Steckelberg

 Kelly Steckelberg works remotely from her patio. Photo by Dustin Snipes.

The world changed earlier for Kelly Steckelberg than it did for most of us. As CFO of Zoom, the Silicon Valley video communications giant, she and other company leaders had been watching the approaching coronavirus storm and anticipating the disturbance it might unleash.

For Zoom, it would be a deluge. Steckelberg’s last day in the office was March 4, 2020. The office had closed to workers the day before, and Zoom’s leaders focused on making sure their employees felt safe and supported. Then they went home.

“We had the luxury that we all lived in the technology,” Steckelberg explains. “We had to adjust to being remote, but the technology itself obviously was something we were all using every day for every meeting. Really, we were watching very closely what was happening. Even watching, I don’t think we could have predicted how quickly it accelerated. On March 15 everything changed overnight for Zoom.”

As many Americans started to work from home, Zoom was on its way to becoming a household name. The company went from an average 10 million daily meeting participants in December 2019 to 300 million in April 2020.

Days blurred as everyone tried “to make sure that all of our customers and prospects who had a need for Zoom had access to it,” she says. It was an exhausting pace, and Steckelberg still had to juggle her many duties at Zoom. She is responsible for the chief accounting officer f unction, financial planning and analysis, budgeting and forecasting, procurement, investor relations, tax and treasury, corporate development, and Zoom’s real estate portfolio, including its offices.

Just as dramatic as the growth in their customer base was the expansion of their head count. Prepandemic Zoom had about 2,200 employees; that number has more than doubled to 5,000. “The brand awareness for Zoom and the flexibility of hiring has made it easy,” Steckelberg says. “Of course, it comes with very unique challenges to double your workforce in a completely remote environment, but we’ve done it.”

While she has been locked down like the rest of us, she has had to put aside her wanderlust. Her tally stands at 60 countries — but over the last year and a half, the farthest she’s gone is to the nearby beach.

Steckelberg is used to moving around. Her family moved often during her childhood, finally settling in Harper, Texas, a small Hill Country town where she had 15 students in her graduating class. There were only two electives offered at her high school: shop or home economics.

Kelly Steckelberg Zoom

 Kelly Steckelberg meets with current MPA students via Zoom while sitting in a hotel lobby in San Antonio during the fall MPA Distinguished Speaker Lyceum.

Arriving at the Forty Acres, she switched majors from fashion merchandising to accounting (her father was a CPA). She took advantage of the five-year MPA program as a student in the program’s early days. “It seemed like a great opportunity to get my master’s done all at one time,” she says. The comprehensive curriculum also prepared her for the CPA exam and gave her a leg up on the competition.

More than that, she says many of the analytical skills she learned have stayed with her. “It’s a lot more about how you think through problems, how you problem solve, and how do you help make decisions. McCombs helped me do well.”

At each stage in her career, she has looked for opportunities that would broaden her skill set. Her first job was with KPMG, where she gained exposure to different industries traveling to Bay Area clients. She started in audit and then took an opportunity in tax to learn something new. She left KPMG and went to PeopleSoft, where after a year, the company offered her a chance to move to Amsterdam.

At the same time, she set a goal to become a public company CFO. “That started to help me target the types of roles I was going for,” she says. She landed at WebEx as the corporate controller, and although she thought one day she might have a shot at becoming CFO, the company was acquired by Cisco. New doors, however, opened.

From there she became CFO of the dating site Zoosk, her first experience working in a private company, a start-up, and a consumer web company. She moved into the COO role and learned the operations side of the business. A long sought-after goal of any CFO – taking a company public – ended with disappointment when Zoosk wasn’t able to adjust its business model quickly enough and called off its IPO. When the founders exited the company, the board asked Steckelberg to take over as CEO. “It was one of the hardest jobs I’ve ever done, but it was amazing and rewarding in the end. When you start to see your strategy come together, it’s really rewarding.”

After Zoosk, she expected to take a break, but within two days of updating her LinkedIn, she heard from a former colleague with a message that would change her life. A colleague from WebEx, Eric Yuan, the founder and CEO of Zoom, sent her a message. “I think he wrote something like, ‘It would be a dream if we could work together again.’”

Steckelberg was drawn by the opportunity to work with Yuan again and the chance to achieve her goal of helping take a company public. When Zoom went public in 2019, it was a career highlight, she says. Of course, no one knew Zoom would command the world stage by spring 2020.

Yuan is pleased he brought her on board. “Kelly is a brilliant leader and someone who makes Zoom a better place. She has an adept ability to make tough decisions and lead by example. We are so lucky to have her on our leadership team.”

Over the past year, she says, the company has stayed focused on two goals: making sure their platform was stable and available to their customers, and supporting a boom in employees. At the same time, they have strived to make decisions that would be sustainable post-pandemic. They had to continue adding sales reps to serve their customers and engineers to keep developing their platform. It was a difficult balance to strike.

Now as workers begin coming back to the office, how will that impact the company’s fortunes? Steckelberg says she doesn’t expect us to stop Zooming. “Zoom has become embedded in all aspects of our lives. It’s in our work life. It’s in our children’s learning. It’s in our social life now,” she says. “As we move toward the time where we can all move around the world again more safely, we’re going to want to leverage Zoom for the aspects that make our lives the most convenient. The future of work is not ever going to look the way it did before.”

Zoom is positioning itself for the post-pandemic world by building out some features that the company hopes will continue to showcase its value. One of them is the Smart Gallery, an innovation meant to improve the experience for a mixed environment where some employees are in a conference room and others are remote. Another new development is Zoom Apps: in-meeting applications by third-party developers to improve the meeting experience, such as integration with a service like Dropbox.

“Over time, what you’re going to see is Zoom continuing to evolve to be a platform where you spend your workday,” she says. “It’s not just where you come together to meet, but it’s also where you do your work and, especially, continue to collaborate with colleagues or with friends and family.”

After a year like no other, Steckelberg says she is proud of what the company has accomplished. “I can’t imagine not having been here with the amazing team and gone through this. It’s a lifelong experience that I’ll never forget.”

The original version of this article was written by Todd Savage and appeared in the summer 2021 edition of McCombs Magazine. His article is reproduced here, edited for length and clarity.

Meet Dave Platt, Accounting Faculty and UT’s Vice Provost for Undergraduate Academic Affairs

Since 1996, David Platt has called UT home. He has touched the lives of thousands of students teaching managerial and cost accounting in the BBA, MPA, and various MBA programs. Let’s learn more about Dave and his current role as UT’s Vice Provost for Undergraduate Academic Affairs.

Meet Dave Platt

Dave Platt did not set out to earn a PhD in accounting. After working as an auditor for PwC in Philadelphia and then in industry, he returned to Cornell intending to earn his PhD in operations management. While in grad school, he found that there was a discipline called managerial accounting that sat at the intersection of accounting, finance, marketing – and he was hooked!

While at Texas McCombs, Dave wore a variety of different hats. He began as a faculty member and researcher, and then added the director of the Center for International Business Education and Research to his resume. After 12 years in that role, Dave became Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education, where he stewarded the operations of the BBA program. In 2019, he joined the Provost’s Office as Vice Provost for Undergraduate Academic Affairs.

In his first 18 months in the Provost’s Office, Dave concentrated on building a working network among the many different undergraduate programs at UT, to make the academic experience the very best it can be across our large and diverse university. Dave notes that “UT is a big place, but it’s important that for any given student it feels like it is a small, tight-knit community.”

Dave has dedicated 12 of the last 18 months largely to responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and trying to do so in a way that, as much as possible under our current operating constraints, keeps undergraduate education at UT going strong. While he misses teaching students, their well-being and educational experience are both still paramount concerns for him.

Dave cross-country skiing with his wife, Nancy.

Dave cross-country skiing with his wife, Nancy.

In his spare time, Dave loves to read, particularly history, and spends as much time as possible in the mountains skiing, hiking, and enjoying the fresh air with his wife, Nancy. And like so many of us, he picked up a few new hobbies during the pandemic. “I’m finally learning to play guitar, something I’ve always wanted to do, and I’ve gotten into making ice cream and dreaming up new recipes,” Dave said. “I even based one on shoofly pie, which I remember from growing up in Pennsylvania.”

Texas McCombs Department of Accounting Facts

Can you guess what year the first accounting course was offered at UT? Or when the first accounting PhD degree was conferred? How about the year we hired our first tenure-track female faculty member? We’ll take you through a short history of the Department of Accounting at The University of Texas at Austin.

Department of Accounting Facts

spurgeon bell

Spurgeon Bell was Dean of the School of Business Administration from 1922-1925.

1912: Spurgeon Bell stands before 20 students in UT’s first accounting class, the Theory and Practice of Accounting.

1928: George Newlove is the first accounting faculty member to receive a distinguished professorship, funded by discovery of oil on university land in 1923.

1934: The first PhD in Accounting at the College of Business Administration is awarded to Lloyd Raisty.

1939: For the first, but not the last, time, accounting classes are populated with more women than men (due to WWII enlistment in the armed forces).

1947: The Department of Accounting is one of five departments created in the College of Business Administration.

1948: The Master in Professional Accounting program is established.

anna fowler

Anna Fowler taught at UT from 1977-2004.

1957: Luzine Bickman is the first Black student to be initiated into the Theta Chapter, a UT fraternal accounting organization.

1958: With nine inaugural members, the Department of Accounting’s Advisory Council is established.

1962: The new Business Administration Economics Building opens (now known as CBA).

1977: Anna Fowler is the first female, tenure-track professor hired by the Department.

1985: The five-year integrated approach to the MPA is introduced, allowing McCombs freshmen and sophomores to begin working on their masters in accounting while still in undergrad.

rowland atiase

Rowland Atiase has been a faculty member since 1987.

1987: Rowland Atiase is the first Black, tenure-track professor hired by the Department.

1994: Texas McCombs’ Department of Accounting is ranked #1 in Public Accounting Report’s survey for the first time.

2002: The ECON-MPA program, which allows UT economics students to get a head start on MPA coursework during their senior year, is created.

2012: The Department of Accounting celebrates its 100 year anniversary!

2019: The MPA Program adopts a proposal requiring every course within the program to include content on data analytics.

As you explore your future in accounting, we hope you discovered  some new and useful information on the Department of Accounting. Reach out to us or visit our website to learn more!

 

The University of Texas at Austin Leads 2019 CPA Exam Pass Rates

In December, the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) announced the CPA Exam pass rates statistics, and The University of Texas at Austin trailblazed to the top of the CPA Exam’s pass rates from first-time test takers at large collegiate programs (60 or more test takers).


The top first-time CPA Exam pass rates by large collegiate programs for 2019 are:

  1. University of Texas at Austin — 358 candidates, 89.5% pass rate
  2. Brigham Young University — 273 candidates, 89.4% pass rate
  3. Wake Forest University — 82 candidates, 88.8% pass rate
  4. Boston College — 129 candidates, 88.3% pass rate
  5. University of Michigan-Ann Arbor — 77 candidates, 88.2% pass rate
  6. University of Florida — 248 candidates, 86.4% pass rate
  7. University of Virginia — 96 candidates, 84.8% pass rate
  8. Texas A&M University — 351 candidates, 82.9% pass rate
  9. University of Wisconsin-Madison — 227 candidates, 82.9% pass rate
  10. Gonzaga University — 118 candidates, 82.4% pass rate

The American Institute of CPAs (AICPA) also named 133 winners of the 2019 Elijah Watt Sells Award. This award recognizes test takers who scored a cumulative average score above 95.50 across all four sections of the CPA exam, passed all four sections of the exam on their first attempt, and completed their testing in 2019. The University of Texas at Austin had twelve (yes, twelve!) Sells Award winners in 2019:

  • Daniel Chang (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Bryan Davis (traditional MPA ‘16)
  • James Hall (Economics MPA ‘19)
  • Kara Killingsworth (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Jerry Lam (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Adam Landefeld (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Collyn Robison (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Travis Sakos (integrated MPA ‘18)
  • Kyle Schoen (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Adam Schor (integrated MPA ‘19)
  • Wei-Ning Tsai (traditional MPA ‘19)
  • Alec Weissman (integrated MPA ‘19)


Section pass rates* for all 55 jurisdictions in 2019 are:

  • 51% for AUD
  • 60% for BEC
  • 46% for FAR
  • 56% for REG

Section pass rates** for UT Austin Candidates in 2019 are:

  • 81% for AUD
  • 92% for BEC
  • 76% for FAR
  • 85% for REG

Section pass rates** for all other Texas colleges & universities in 2019 are:

  • 53% for AUD
  • 59% for BEC
  • 48% for FAR
  • 58% for REG

 

*All first-time test takers in 2019
**All test takers (first time or otherwise) in Texas in 2019

Three Steps to Better Investing

Advice on selecting mutual funds, listening to CEOs, and considering climate change, courtesy of Texas McCombs research, including our very own accounting professor Jeff Hales.

Better Investing
If you’re looking to make better investment decisions, it’s a good idea to listen to the experts. And who’s more of an expert than a business researcher who studies investing and the stock market.

With that in mind, consider applying these practical research findings from Texas McCombs to your investments:

Seek low taxes on mutual funds. A study by finance professor Clemens Sialm showed that funds with lower tax burdens had higher-than-average returns. That’s why Sialm urges fund shoppers to look beyond past performance and check out taxes as well. “You have to dig deeper in the prospectus, but the information is there,” he says. Research websites such as Morningstar can help. They list the taxable distributions along with the performance of a fund.

Bet on big-talking CEOs. When executives use extreme language on quarterly earnings calls — words such as “astonishing,” “incredible,” and “exceptional” — it can benefit capital markets, according to research from accounting professor Jeff Hales. For executives who speak in superlatives, their words can produce a stronger reaction in stock prices, increased trading volume, and adjusted analyst forecasts. CEO language can even foreshadow a company’s future earnings.

Read the entire article on Big Ideas.

9 Facts You Didn’t Know About UT Austin

You may already know that Texas McCombs has the top-ranked graduate accounting program in the nation, but did you know these fun facts about The University of Texas at Austin? Keep reading to learn more about the 40 Acres!

Tower Girl

Tower Girl near her nest on top of the UT Tower

1. TOWER GIRL
The University’s campus is home to many native animals, including our very own falcon living on top of the UT Tower. Referred to as Tower Girl, she was discovered by the Biodiversity Center whose group of scientists and students study species and land use in Texas. She normally lays eggs every year that have the potential to hatch in April or May! The eyes of Tower Girl are truly upon you. Read about Tower Girl.

Gutenberg Bible

The Gutengerg Bible – Photo Credit: https://www.history.com/news/7-things-you-may-not-know-about-the-gutenberg-bible

2. THE GUTENBERG BIBLE
The Harry Ransom Center, an archive, library, and museum, holds 1 of the 49 Gutenberg Bibles that exist in the world today. Explore one of the first books created with moveable type.

Domino

Meet Domino, the FAC cat!

3. DOMINO THE FAC CAT
Domino, the campus cat, can be spotted sitting on the grass near the Flawn Academic Center (FAC) in West Mall. Many UT students, including a UT professor, take care of Domino with cat food and lots of petting.
Hear from fellow Longhorns about their love for Domino!

Albino Squirrel

While on campus, keep an eye out for the Albino Squirrel

4. THE LEGEND OF THE ALBINO SQUIRREL
Squirrels are very common creatures around campus, but one particular squirrel is hard to find: The Albino Squirrel. According to campus legend, if you spot this special squirrel on your way to an exam, you will get an A!

Joseph Nicéphore Niépce First Photograph

Joseph Nicéphore Niépce’s First Photograph – Photo Credit: https://www.hrc.utexas.edu/niepce-heliograph/

5. THE FIRST PHOTOGRAPH
The First Photograph by Joseph Nicéphore Niépce is one of the earliest forms of photography taken with a camera. It’s hard to see the image at first glance, but a deeper look shows a residence area in France. The Harry Ransom center purchased the photograph in 1963.

LBJ Library

The LBJ Library is a sight to see! Photo Credit: https://www.goodfreephotos.com/united-states/texas/austin/the-great-at-the-lbj-presidential-library.jpg.php

6. LBJ LIBRARY
UT houses one of the 14 Presidential Libraries called the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library administered by the National Archives and Records Administration. Within its walls, the library holds over 45 million pages and many more artifacts about the LBJ administration. Check it out online!

Littlefield Fountain

The infamous Littlefield Fountain – Photo Credit: https://fineartamerica.com/featured/littlefield-fountain-on-ut-austin-campus-karen-stephenson.html?product=art-print

7. LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN
This beautiful fountain located in South Mall was created to honor the memory of students and alumni who lost their lives during World War I. It is now the home to majority of graduation pictures as students jump in with their stoles on and often champagne in hand; yet another UT tradition.
Find out more about its history.

Longhorn Logo

The famous burnt orange Longhorn logo!

8. THE ORIGIN OF BURNT ORANGE AND WHITE
In 1855, two students stopped by a store to purchase ribbons to hand out to the crowd during a game. When they arrived, the store owner only had the colors orange and white most of in stock. It wasn’t for another 73 years, in 1928, that UT declared orange and white as the official school colors.
Read more about this legendary story.

The UT Tower

The UT Tower lights up the night – Photo Credit: https://alcalde.texasexes.org/2013/01/why-is-the-tower-orange-now-you-can-find-out/

9. THE UT TOWER
Originally built as a library and standing at 307 feet tall, the UT Tower is one of the most iconic monuments on campus (and on any U.S. campus!). The Tower lights up orange after every sports win with a number “1” on each side to show UT pride, and it was first lit during the 1937 football season. Learn more about the Tower!

Tips to Stay Connected, Productive, and Sane While Working Remotely

Stuck at home? Telecommuting and leadership expert David Harrison shares 8 tips for how to make the most of this unusual work-from-home moment.

By: Sara Robberson Lentz

 

 

An unprecedented number of people across the world — from CEOs to college students — now find themselves working from home. For some, this change is causing anxiety and uncertainty about how to maintain productivity.

David Harrison is a management professor at the McCombs School of Business and a research expert on effective telecommuting and leadership. We reached out to him for advice on how to make the most of telecommuting while practicing social distancing during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The data on telecommuting is overwhelmingly positive,” he says. “Our meta-analysis found that people who telecommuted actually had higher performance. The only downside was a possible drop in the quality of their relationship with their co-workers.”

His biggest advice is to keep the virtual communication portals open. “Maintaining a connection with your peers and team is crucial,” he says. “You should be prepared to communicate more frequently about your day-to-day processes.”

Harrison believes this could be an opportunity to see how telecommuting works in new settings such as the classroom. He encourages others to remember this is uncharted territory for many, and we are all in it together. “Be more patient, be more generous, and be more open. Hopefully you are picking up new skills,” he says.

Here are his tips for how to succeed at embracing this telecommuting change:

1. Stay connected with peers.

Social connection is good for psychological health and task completion habits. Do what you can to bring peers into your circle. Ask them questions and alert them when you have something going on that could be a joint online activity. For students, if you don’t have a virtual study group, now’s the time to make one.

2. All of us need non-task interactions alongside getting work done.

Communication builds trust, particularly through a narrow medium such as virtual (rather than face-to-face) work. Set aside the first 5 minutes of any meeting for “check-ins” about how the rest of life is going. There will be plenty to talk about during the next few weeks and even months.

3. Shared emotion is vital.

Don’t ignore your and others’ mood(s). If a virtual partner is feeling down and you’re giddy and goofy, that’s not helpful. Empathy matters. It builds trust and keeps the relationship going, even though the emotional cues are harder to pick up. The shared experience — the synchronization — is what matters. So, use face-based interaction when you can. Show support and you’ll get support.

4. Structure your day.

Create a schedule of online or virtual activities and stick to it. Routine is your rock, particularly when everything else is fluctuating around you.

5. Patience, patience, patience with technology is another key.

Things that used to go fast are going to slow down as everyone tries to crowd into the same bandwidth. All learning curves are steep at first. You will most likely get computer-frustrated. Have an outlet. (I have a hacky sack that is getting extra use right now).

6. Be able to show your work.

If you aren’t seen, people generally don’t think you are doing stuff. Try and create a trail and visibility for what you are doing by sending more emails, drafts, or even photos of your work. It’s important to involve others in what you are doing and for them to see proof of that.

7. Find apps to help you digitize.

If you’re working on things that are not digital docs, you need a way to translate them online. I recommend investing in a smartphone app that goes from photo to pdf. Some excellent apps are free, including a native app in the Google Suite and my favorite, “Tiny PDF.”

8. Take a learning orientation, not a performance orientation, to this weird time.

Think about how this part of your life is helping you develop your repertoire of virtual collaboration skills. You’ll definitely use them again. If you master Zoom, try Microsoft Teams, and so on. In the long run, and paradoxically, a learning orientation creates better performance because of the breadth of talent you’ve amassed.

Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

What a journey! It’s been a year full of learning, making new friends, studying for exams, drinking coffee, consuming as many tacos as possible, and so much more. The Master in Professional Accounting Program Office and the Department of Accounting were thrilled to celebrate the MPA Class of 2019 at Commencement on Saturday, May 25.

Family, friends, faculty, and staff came together on Saturday to congratulate over 300 students (including integrated, traditional, and ECON MPAs) graduating from the Master in Professional Accounting program.

Before walking across that stage, an MPA Commencement Reception was held in the Graduate School Building Atrium. The food was plentiful and the photo booth was lively as graduating students and their families mingled with faculty and staff from the McCombs School of Business. It was a great way to kick off an exciting day ahead.

Students then headed across Speedway to Gregory Gymnasium to get ready to receive their diplomas! Over 200 MPA students and faculty members were a part of the ceremony, including MPA Senior Director Steve Smith, Department Chair Michael Clement, and Dean Jay Hartzell. They all mentioned in their speeches how this class continued to exceed expectations and how bright these students’ futures are.

 Dean Jay Hartzell along with faculty and students making their way to Gregory Gymnasium for the 2019 MPA Commencement.

Dean Jay Hartzell along with faculty and students making their way to Gregory Gymnasium for the 2019 MPA Commencement.

 

Our keynote speaker was Brien Smith, the Managing Director of Neuberger Berman and the COO of the Neuberger Berman Private Equity Division. Mr. Smith received a Master in Professional Accounting and a Bachelor of Business Administration from the University of Texas at Austin.

Brien Smith of Neuberger Berman and MPA alum was our keynote speaker.

Brien Smith of Neuberger Berman and MPA alum was our keynote speaker.

 

We also had graduating MPAs share their experiences in the program. James Olsen is an iMPA who was born and raised in Houston, Texas and is a first generation college student. Alec Weismann is also an iMPA student and grew up in Minnesota. They both are outstanding people and future leaders, and we loved their speeches on how this Class of 2019 “truly will change the world.”

iMPA student James Olson closing out his speech.

iMPA student James Olson closing out his speech.

 

Additionally, student awards were given out during Commencement. Adam Landefeld won the Outstanding 4th Year MPA Award. Adam’s outstanding academic performance has earned him several scholarships including the competitive Endowed Presidential Scholarship.  According to one of his instructors, Adam “is a natural leader and was prepared for class with interesting questions.  He was a delight to teach!”

 Adam Landefeld and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Adam Landefeld and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Alec Weissman won the Outstanding 5th Year MPA Award. Alec also worked as a TA for accounting professor Jeff Johanns who explained that Alec “demonstrated dedication way above a typical TA” by, among other things, volunteering to mentor a struggling student.  Academically, Alec is among this highest performing MPAs with a graduate GPA of 4.0.

Alec Weissman and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Alec Weissman and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Derek John received the MPA Outstanding Student Leadership Award for his meritorious service and support of the Master in Professional Accounting program and community. Derek was a Peer Career Consultant (PCC) and continually went above and beyond to ensure MPA students were getting all they could out of their time at Texas McCombs… From recording webinars to conducting mock interviews to reviewing resumes, Derek added something special to the program, and we are so thankful to have had him as a student and PCC!

Derek John and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Derek John and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Emily O’Keefe received the Outstanding tMPA Award for her exceptional contributions to student life and class unity through demonstrations of personal character, class spirit, and campus leadership. She was also the person to close out the MPA Commencement Ceremony by singing “The Eyes of Texas.” Congratulations, Emily!

Emily O'Keefe and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

Emily O’Keefe and MPA Senior Director Steve Smith.

 

Even though the Ceremony lasted almost two hours, it seemed to be over in the blink of an eye. MPAs hugged and took pictures together, then said their goodbyes. It’s always bittersweet to see our students move on to the next chapter in their lives, but we know they truly will change the world and will always be Longhorns. We are so proud of the graduating MPA Class of 2019 and cannot wait to see what they accomplish. Hook ‘em!

 Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

Congratulations to the MPA Class of 2019!

 

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