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Resident Sessions
Students attend three resident sessions over a 25-month period at Fairfield
University. Each involves six business days and one weekend and incorporates a
variety of classes, workshops and small group activities. The curriculum
concentrates on the main areas critical to today’s bank executive:
- Influencing Public Policy and
Government Relations
- Financial Services, including Commercial Banking coverage
- Finance
- Money & Capital Markets
- Strategic Planning
- Leadership
- Marketing
Refinements in curriculum and class schedules keep the National School
relevant to today’s banker. Course material and programs are intense;
teamwork and task force structures are emphasized; and research assignments
are integrated into the resident sessions. The focus remains on real-life
solutions and application to the student’s banking careers.
In the final resident session, students participate in a realistic computer
simulation. Student teams, each managing a fictional community bank, compete with each
other in a complex, economic environment. Each segment of the simulation
represents a year of a community bank’s life, complete with necessary
financial decisions and their consequences, major management crises,
interruptions and the reality of competition. This exercise is truly the
capstone experience of the National School of Banking.
The resident session for 2006 begins with orientation on Thursday
evening, July 13 for new students and ends Friday, July 21 at 3 p.m.
Student Assignments
Between resident sessions, students must complete a series of assignments
directly related to the core areas. They participate in online and telephone
briefings and meetings to reinforce material covered in their projects. During
each session, students work together in study groups on class assignments.
Formal and informal presentations and research papers will be the methods of
delivery for both resident and inter-resident projects.
These assignments serve three purposes:
- They allow practical application of theory and techniques taught in the
lectures and small group sessions.
- They utilize both individual and team format. More and more, teams are used
by today’s companies to create and execute projects. The successful executive
must understand how to maximize team membership and leadership to produce
results that benefit the organization.
- They allow the student to utilize his or her sponsoring institution as the
subject of many of the projects. This encourages the banker to open new channels
of communication within the bank and to develop a deeper appreciation of the
challenges of senior management.
Level of Instruction
Classes in the National School of Banking are conducted at the graduate level.
It is expected that the applicants, through academic standing or through
professional experience, be prepared to participate in these courses.
Preparation can include graduation from a state banking school or AIB diploma
program, a Baccalaureate or Master’s degree, or extensive experience in the
financial services industry.
Graduation
Diplomas are awarded by the National School of Banking in cooperation with
Fairfield University at commencement exercises held on the last day of the
third session. All students who have attended the three resident sessions and
successfully completed all assignments will graduate from the National School.
To qualify for graduation with honors, a student must achieve a grade point
average of at least a 3.5 out of a possible 4.0, without probation.
The Chairman’s Award
The highest honor bestowed by the National School of Banking is the
Chairman’s Award. This is presented to the graduate determined by the National
School’s administration to best display the characteristics of the class:
leadership and academic excellence.
Thomas A. McGrath Faculty Award
Established in 1991, this award is presented when appropriate to a faculty
member who exemplifies qualities of outstanding dedication and service to the
National School and its students. Father McGrath served as a faculty member of
the school for 25 years and was an integral part of the shaping of the
curriculum and the spirit of the National School of Banking.
Graduate/Undergraduate Credit Recommendations
The American Council on Education (ACE), the nation’s major coordinating body
for post-secondary education, has recommended that 21 graduate credits or
upper-division undergraduate credits be granted for completing the National
School. Although this does not mean that credits will be granted automatically,
ACE’s evaluations are held in high esteem and have been accepted at more than
1,400 colleges and universities throughout the nation.
Continuing Education Units
A total of
190 CPE credits are available in the field of Specialized Knowledge and
Applications and in the field of Management. Registered with the National
Association of State Boards of Accountancy as a sponsor of continuing
professional education on the National Registry of CPE sponsors. State boards of
accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses.
Complaints regarding registered sponsors may be addressed to the National
Registry of CPE Sponsors, 150 Fourth Avenue North, Nashville, TN, 37219-2417.
Web site: www.nasba.org
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