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Undergraduate
Lauren Anderson spent her summer studying and traveling in
China, where she had an internship in Shanghai with a Chinese software company, AVCON. The
international business and marketing major wrote English marketing materials for AVCON’s video
conferencing systems, and the company has already offered her a position next summer.
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International business major
Stephen Wright (above right) traveled to Abu Dhabi in
February for an Education Without Borders conference, a meeting of 1,000 students from around the
world to dialogue about global social challenges and, more importantly, to commit to positive
change.
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For 11 years, the Moore School of Business’s undergraduate international business (IB)
program has maintained its #1 ranking for that specialty according to
U.S. News & World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges
Guide.” Gaining entrance into this prestigious major in the Sonoco International Business
Department is quite competitive, with a select group of students admitted each year.
In addition to the international business curriculum, IB majors are required to study a
foreign language and to participate in at least one study abroad experience. The University of
South Carolina CIBER program supports these study abroad programs, providing financial support for
curriculum and program development, program management, and domestic and international travel
costs. The Moore School sponsors programs in Italy, Prague, and Sweden through the University’s
International Programs Office. IB majors are encouraged to participate in international
internships, international research, and service-learning projects.
Faculty-led Initiatives
Europe
The “Doing Business in Europe” course offered by
Dr. Tatiana Kostova, associate professor of international
business, includes an 11-day trip to London, Paris, and Prague where students visit companies and
attend lectures and meetings with executives.
Africa
“Doing Business in Africa,” taught by
Dr. Robert Rolfe, professor of international business,
includes travel to South Africa, Mozambique, and Swaziland to learn how globalization is affecting
sub-Saharan Africa through visits to companies, diamond mines, and the Johannesburg stock exchange.
China
Students visit schools, businesses, and cultural sites in Beijing and Shanghai, China, as
part of “Advanced Issues in Entrepreneurship” taught by management lecturer
Patrick DeMouy.
Romania
Each summer, Moore School students teach more than 100 high school students in Cluj-Napoca,
Romania, at the Global Business English Immersion Camp. Both the Moore School participants and
Romanian high school students have described the camp experience as “life changing.”
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Junior international business and finance major,
Lucas Fox, traveled to Colombia in May with a Witness for
Peace (WFP) delegation to examine the possible impact of the proposed U.S.-Colombian Free Trade
Agreement on the Colombian people. Fox included his findings in a formal report upon his
return.
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