Lunch & Learn: Mark Witte

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Lunch & Learn: Mark Witte

The Harvey Kapnick Center for Business Institutions presents Lunch & Learn.

By Kapnick Center for Business Institutions

Date and time

Thursday, April 13, 2023 · 12:30 - 1:30pm CDT

Location

Harvey Kapnick Center for Business Institutions

2010 Sheridan Road Evanston, IL 60208

About this event

The Kapnick Lunch & Learn is a casual lunchtime event for Northwestern undergraduate students. Come hang out with the Kapnick Center, eat lunch, mingle with classmates and enjoy conversation with our guest speaker!

Lunch & Learn is capped at 10 students.

Out of respect for our guests and your classmates, if you are unable to show up within the first 6 minutes of the start time, please refrain from signing up.

Mark Witte is a Professor of Instruction and Director of Undergraduate Studies in the Economics department at Northwestern University. Mark's research deals with applied questions in macroeconomics and public finance. His main interests are in consumption theory and topics in taxation. His teaching interests include macroeconomics, money and banking, public finance, and the economics of the environment and the extraction of natural resources. He has been voted onto the Associated Student Government honor roll numerous times in recognition of both his teaching and student advising. He has been honored with a Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences (WCAS) Distinguished Teaching Award, and a WCAS Distinguished Leader in the Undergraduate Community Award.

Topics Covered:

  • Hear Mark's thoughts on Silicon Valley Bank
  • Open discussion / Q&A

Organized by

The Minor in Business Institutions offered by the Harvey Kapnick Center for Business Institutions is designed to provide Northwestern undergraduates with a rigorous introduction to business and management fundamentals.  The minor is open to all Northwestern undergraduates regardless of major or home school. The minor allows them to build on the set of skills and knowledge they have acquired through other Northwestern coursework to prepare for employment in the business world.  It also allows students to connect their study of business and management fundamentals to broader areas of academic inquiry both by linking the study of principles of business and management to the social science scholarship that these principles are based on and by introducing students to social science and humanities scholarship on the cultural, political, philosophical, literary and social aspects of business institutions. Therefore, the minor is not meant to serve as narrowly conceived pre-professional training.  Instead the minor offers a broad multi-disciplinary perspective on a significant area of inquiry in 21st century society.   Students without extensive quantitative training are particularly encouraged to apply.  The minor is designed so that such students can acquire the necessary quantitative background by completing four basic prerequisite courses in mathematics, statistics and economics.

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