Generated by GPT-5-mini| Ivey Business School | |
|---|---|
| Name | Ivey Business School |
| Type | Business school |
| Established | 1922 |
| Parent | Western University |
| City | London |
| Province | Ontario |
| Country | Canada |
| Campus | Urban |
Ivey Business School Ivey Business School is the business faculty of Western University located in London, Ontario, founded in 1922. The school is known for its case-method pedagogy and strong ties to corporate, governmental, and nonprofit sectors such as Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of Montreal, Scotiabank, Canadian National Railway, Magna International, Thomson Reuters, Bell Canada, and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.
Ivey traces roots to the establishment of commerce courses at Western University in the early 20th century and benefited from donors like Richard G. Ivey and institutions such as Massey Foundation, Ivey Foundation, Eli Lilly and Company, Imperial Oil, and Canadian Pacific Railway. The school's development intersected with events including the Great Depression, World War II, postwar expansion related to the Marshall Plan, and periods of Canadian higher education reform influenced by commissions akin to the Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism and policy shifts under premiers like Leslie Frost and John Robarts. Leadership transitions involved figures linked to University of Toronto, McGill University, Queen's University, and collaborations with international partners such as Harvard Business School, INSEAD, London Business School, Wharton School, Stanford Graduate School of Business, and Kellogg School of Management.
Ivey offers undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral curricula including programs comparable to the Bachelor of Commerce at Queen's University and the Master of Business Administration at Rotman School of Management, along with executive degrees echoing formats used by Harvard Business School and Columbia Business School. Core pedagogy emphasizes the case method developed at Harvard Business School and adapted alongside practices from IMD, HEC Paris, Said Business School, and ESSEC Business School. Degree pathways engage with accreditation bodies such as AACSB International and EQUIS, and program validations referencing standards set by entities like the Council of Ontario Universities and comparisons with programs at York University and University of British Columbia. Collaborative options include joint initiatives with Schulich School of Law affiliates, partnerships resembling alliances with MaRS Discovery District, and exchange networks involving National University of Singapore and Peking University.
Admission statistics are often compared with schools like Rotman School of Management, Schulich School of Business, Desautels Faculty of Management, and Sauder School of Business; rankings appear in publications such as Financial Times, The Economist, Bloomberg Businessweek, Forbes, and Maclean's. Selectivity metrics are benchmarked against cohorts from University of Toronto Schools, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, and applicants with credentials tied to organizations like Canadian Securities Institute and examinations similar to the GMAT and GRE. Financial aid and scholarship structures mirror programs from Trudeau Foundation, Mitacs, Ontario Graduate Scholarship, and corporate sponsors such as RBC Foundation and Scotiabank.
Faculty research spans strategy, finance, organizational behaviour, and entrepreneurship with scholars publishing in journals like Harvard Business Review, Strategic Management Journal, Journal of Finance, Academy of Management Journal, and Journal of Marketing. Research centres collaborate with policy stakeholders including Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada analogues, regional development agencies comparable to Ontario Centres of Excellence, and industry partners such as BlackBerry, Shopify, Manulife Financial, and Sun Life Financial. Faculty appointments have included candidates with prior roles at Stanford University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Columbia University, Oxford University, Cambridge University, and visiting scholars from World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
The school operates from facilities in London, Ontario with buildings that host case rooms modeled on spaces at Harvard Business School and technology labs comparable to those at MIT Media Lab; notable features include archives and collections referencing donors like Ivey Foundation and study spaces akin to centres at Bodleian Library and Library of Congress. The campus interfaces with local institutions such as Victoria Hospital, Western Fair District, Fanshawe College, and municipal partners including City of London (Ontario), and benefits from proximity to transportation nodes like Toronto Pearson International Airport and London International Airport.
Student organizations and clubs echo structures at Rotman Commerce, Schulich Students' Society, Queen's Commerce Society, and include case competition teams participating in events like CFA Institute Research Challenge, Intercollegiate Business Competition, Hult Prize, and Global Case Competition. Alumni networks encompass executives and leaders associated with RBC, TD Bank Group, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, BlackBerry, Magna International, Suncor Energy, Air Canada, Rogers Communications, Loblaw Companies, Google, Microsoft, Amazon (company), and public figures linked to Parliament of Canada, provincial legislatures, and international organizations including United Nations, World Health Organization, and International Labour Organization.
Executive Education offerings mirror programs at IMD, INSEAD, London Business School, and Wharton Executive Education and deliver custom programs for corporations such as CN, Manulife, Tim Hortons, and public-sector partners comparable to Canada Revenue Agency and Health Canada. Outreach initiatives involve entrepreneurship support similar to Communitech, incubator collaborations like Velocity (University of Waterloo), and community engagement with nonprofit partners modeled on United Way and YMCA.
Category:Business schools in Canada