------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
>From admin(a)SSRN.COM Sun Mar 19 17:27:57 2000
Date: Wed, 23 Sep 1998 09:13:55 -0700
Reply-to: admin(a)SSRN.COM
>From: Sherry Beauchamp <admin(a)SSRN.COM>
Subject: Announcing a new FEN Journal
To: SSRN-SUPER(a)PUBLISHER.SSRN.COM
Status: RO
X-Status:
X-Keywords:
X-UID: 394
As has been our practice in the past we will distribute this
journal at no charge to interested subscribers. All members
of FEN will receive the journal. You can ask to be taken off
the mailing list by simply replying with the message Remove
from FEN Course.
We invite members of all other SSRN networks to request a
subscription to FEN Course. You can do so by replying with
the message Subscribe FEN Course
FEN-Course Abstracting Journal
Editors:
KAREN H. WRUCK
Harvard University
Mailto:kwruck@hbs.edu
PETER TUFANO
Harvard Business School
Mailto:ptufano@hbs.edu
Our new Finance Course Abstracting Journal (FEN-Course) is
devoted to the rapid, worldwide dissemination of innovative
courses addressing subject areas covered by the Financial
Economics Network (FEN) journals. Innovative courses
include courses that: cover new and emerging fields, bring
the findings of cutting-edge research into the classroom,
utilize unique materials or educational approaches, and/or
address standard subject matter in a particularly effective
way. Subject areas include, but are not limited to:
Corporate Finance and Organizations, Banking and Financial
Institutions, Capital Markets, International Finance,
Emerging Markets, Derivatives, and Real Estate. Courses
designed for undergraduates, graduate students and
executives are all welcomed, as are courses adopting a
variety of educational formats. The latter includes
lecture-based courses, case-based courses, project courses,
and courses based on other approaches to learning, e.g.
simulated trading in financial markets.
In disseminating innovative course materials, we are
committed to upholding standards of collegiality,
referencing and documentation equal to those that are
standard in our research efforts. It is not common in the
profession to reference the source of ideas in teaching
materials in the same fashion that we reference the source
of ideas that are developed in journal articles and books.
Yet ideas from courses and teaching materials strongly
influence the work of scholars, students and managers. We
strongly encourage the acknowledgment and appropriate
citation of such work. We invite you, fellow teachers and
scholars, to make use of the material offered in FEN-Course
in your own courses, teaching. If you do so, we request
that you reference the material as you would any piece of
scholarly work.
Submissions to FEN-COURSE can be sent to the editors, Karen
Hopper Wruck kwruck(a)hbs.edu, or Peter Tufano ptufano(a)hbs.edu
As part of a submission package we would like to receive the
following:
1) A course description of up to 500 words.
2) A document, such as a class by class reading list with
full references for as many of the materials as possible,
including cases, articles, exercises, problem sets,
assignment questions, etc. The more complete and detailed
your document, the more useful it will be to colleagues. To
reduce the administrative burden on your office, we strongly
recommend that you make this document available for
distribution in electronic form.
3) JEL codes representing the appropriate topic areas
covered by your course. These codes are available from
http://www.econlit.org/elclasjn.htm#d2head
4) A brief description of the type of course (required,
elective, undergraduate, graduate, executive), number of
times the course has been offered, enrollment, and history
of its development, if these are not included in the course
abstract or accompanying document.
Any questions regarding FEN-COURSE can be directly addressed
to the editors kwruck(a)hbs.edu or ptufano(a)hbs.edu
A D V I S O R Y B O A R D
____________________________________________________________
FINANCE COURSE ABSTRACTS
FRANKLIN ALLEN
Nippon Life Professor of Finance and Economics, University
of Pennsylvania, Wharton School
MICHAEL J. BARCLAY
Assoc. Prof. of Finance, University of Rochester, William E.
Simon Graduate School of Business Administration
GEERT BEKAERT
Assoc. Prof. of Finance, Stanford University Graduate School
of Business
MICHAEL H. BRADLEY
F.M. Kirby Prof. of Investment Banking, Duke University,
Fuqua School of Business
ROBERT F. BRUNER
Vandell Research Prof. of Business Administration, University
of Virginia, Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business
Administration
SUSAN CHAPLINSKY
Assoc. Prof. of Business Administration, University of Virginia,
Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business Administration
HARRY DEANGELO
Charles E. Cook/Community Bank Prof. of Banking, School
of Business Administration, U. of Southern California
STEPHEN R. FOERSTER
Associate Professor of Finance, Richard Ivey School of
Business, The University of Western Ontario
JULIAN FRANKS
Corporation of London Professor of Finance, Institute of
Finance, London Business School; Director, EIASM;
Director, European Union TMR Grant
ROBERT GERTNER
Prof. of Economics and Strategy, University of Chicago,
Graduate School of Business; Co-Editor, Journal of Business
CAMPBELL R. HARVEY
J. Paul Sticht Professor of International Business, Duke
University, Fuqua School of Business
LAURIE SIMON HODRICK
Professor of Finance and Economics, Columbia University,
Graduate School of Business
MICHAEL C. JENSEN
Jesse Isidor Straus Professor, Harvard Business School;
President, SSEP, Inc.
STEVEN N. KAPLAN
Leon Carroll Marshall Professor of Finance, University of
Chicago, Graduate School of Business; Co-founder and
Series Advisor, CaseNet
DENNIS E. LOGUE
Steven Roth Professor of Management, The Amos Tuck
School of Business Administration, Dartmouth College;
Co-editor: Contemporary Finance Digest
TIMOTHY LUEHRMAN
Professor of Finance, Thunderbird, The American Graduate
School of International Management
RONALD M. SCHMIDT
Professorial Lecturer and Chairman of the Faculty Committee
on International Executive Programs, University of Rochester,
William E.Simon Graduate School of Business Administration
WILLIAM F. SHARPE
The STANCO 25 Prof. of Finance, Graduate School of Business,
Stanford Business School; Past President, American Finance
Association; 1990 Nobel Laureate in Economic Sciences
JEREMY C. STEIN
J.C. Penney Prof. of Management, Sloan School of Management,
MIT; Co-founder and Series Advisor, CaseNet
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
This is Social Science Research Network's (SSRN) general announcements list.
All subscribers to other SSRN lists [FEN, ARN, ERN, LAN, LitNet, and LSN
(including Cyber-Law)] are automatically subscribed. If you receive duplicate
mailings, it means you are subscribed to other lists under more than one id.
Please contact admin(a)ssrn.com to correct this.