1. Renewal of the commitment to PRME, signed by the highest executive of the organization; Leonard Cheng, Dean of HKUST Business School, is still fully committed to PRME as previously signed, and has electronically approved this information sharing update. 2. Major Achievements in relation to the implementation of one or more Principles during the last 18 months 2.1 Principle 1 Purpose: We will develop the capabilities of students to be future generators of sustainable value for business and society at large and to work for an inclusive and sustainable global economy. The HKUST Business School is committed to a vision of transformation through the co-development of knowledge and accountability. As a School uniquely placed in an East-meets-West environment, Our vision for the Postgraduate program is to: Advance the frontiers of global business knowledge within a China context Develop responsible business leaders in Asia for the entire world Contribute to the social and economic transformation of the region Our Goals and Objectives for the UG Program are: By graduation, business students are expected to achieve the following 9 learning outcomes: 1. Graduates will be critical and creative thinkers who make effective decisions supported by analytical and quantitative techniques. 2. Graduates will be effective communicators in oral and written English and Chinese for general business applications. 3. Graduates will have broad understanding of the core business functions and integrate these functions to solve business problems. 4. Graduates will have in-depth grasp of their area of business concentration or 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. major. Graduates will be effective team members and leaders. Graduates will be effective in multi-cultural and international settings. Graduates will be effective users of information technology and sources of information in business applications. Graduates will understand their professional and ethical responsibility. Graduates will be life-long learners who have an inquiring mind characterized by a love for learning, curiosity, a critical spirit and self-monitoring of their own learning. Currently, all business undergraduates need to complete a compulsory 2-credit ethics course in their 1st year of study, namely Business Ethics and Individual. The course focuses on issues and cases on interactions between business, society, and the individual. It addresses potential conflict areas in various disciplines, and shows how competing goals of various stakeholders may be resolved. The HKUST wants all graduates to have: Respect for others and high standards of personal integrity; Compassion and a readiness to contribute to the community; The HKUST Business School wants graduates to understand their professional and ethical responsibility. The intended Learning Outcomes of the course, Business Ethics and Individual, have therefore been aligned with the ethical goals of the Department and the University. Thus, upon completion of this course, students will understand their professional and ethical responsibility. A pilot 2-credit course on “Responsible Leadership and Ethics” was offered to the full-time MBA students in Spring 2010. Starting from 2011, all MBA students need to complete a compulsory 2-credit course on “Responsible Leadership and Ethics”. HKUST EMBA for Chinese executive offers “Legal Environment and Corporate Responsibility for Business” course. A new elective course “Social Entrepreneurship and Venture Philanthropy” will be offered to both undergraduates and post-graduates in Spring 2013. The course aim is to develop student skills in identifying and evaluating exiting HK for-profit or non-profit enterprises with a social mission that are suitable for a venture philanthropy investment. Learning Outcomes: Understanding of Social Entrepreneurship and Venture philanthropy as innovative methods of creating social impact by applying business processes and practices; Knowledge and understanding of how to define, address and solve social issues by using business and investment skills; Ability to conduct market research and networking to source potential deals and investment opportunities; Ability to conduct non-profit organizational due diligence and analyze an organization against a set of business, social and other related objectives; Ability to research, write and present a professional, credible and convincing investment pitch; Ability to evaluate an investment’s success against predetermined criteria using various evaluation tools (Note: this outcome will only be possible from Year 2 of the elective); Ability to structure, plan and implement funding projects, working with a variety of stakeholders (from investors to company officers); Ability to work in a culturally diverse team with cross-functional skills; Ability to develop leadership and creative approaches in an innovative business/finance sector. HKUST Business School also offer undergraduate students the option of taking any of three elective credit bearing courses in Social Service Learning (social responsibility, social service learning and social enterprise internship) Programs. The programs aim to create responsible business leaders who contribute to the design of sustainable and inclusive markets by providing a framework for understanding the challenges and opportunities ahead. Service Learning Program: The service learning helps in serving others, especially offering resources to meet the needs of the Hong Kong Community and beyond. Acting to fulfill our vision of responding to the need of the society, students are able to connect classroom theory with practical experience in the community. Service learning allows students to use service to make a difference in their communities and in their lives as well. Each semester students can choose from a variety of service learning-based courses across a wide range of disciplines at the university. At the end of these courses, students will be able to work in teams with a Non-governmental Organization (NGO) on a project that applies concepts, knowledge, skills and methodologies learned from business courses to specific, real-world business problems and issue Learning objectives: Graduates can analyze basic organizational and NGO issues from both internal and external perspectives Graduates can give and receive feedback on project performance from peers and project supervisors Graduates can participate interactively and responsibly in team discussions and decision-making Graduates can present essential findings in both written and oral form to a variety of stakeholders in the project Department of Management is also offering an elective course namely Business Ethics and Policy. It is a four-credit course in one semester which addresses problems and challenges in managing businesses ethically. The course also introduces social responsibility, ethics of consumer production and marketing, gender and race, pollution, health and safety, information and communication, politics, trans-national considerations and ethical policy. Principle 2: Values We will incorporate into our academic activities and curricula the values of global social responsibility as portrayed in international initiatives such as the United Nations Global Compact. HKUST has set expectation on the attributes of our education, and each of the School is offering a comprehensive curriculum in the observance of the University’s guidelines: Academic excellence An in-depth grasp of at least one area of specialist or professional study, based on a forward-looking and inquiry-driven curriculum. Broad-based education Intellectual breadth, flexibility, and curiosity, including an understanding of the role of rational, balanced inquiry and discussion, and a grasp of basic values across the disciplines of science, social science, engineering and the humanities. Competency and capacity building High-end, transferable competencies, including analytical, critical, quantitative and communications skills. Leadership and Teamwork A capacity for leadership and teamwork, including the ability to motivate others, to be responsible and reliable, and to give and take direction and constructive criticism. International Outlook An international outlook, and an appreciation of cultural diversity. Vision and an orientation to the future Adaptability and flexibility, a passion for learning, and the ability to develop clear, forward-looking goals, and self-direction and self-discipline. Ethical standards and compassion Respect for others, high standards of integrity, compassion, and a readiness to contribute to the community. 2.2 Principle 3: Method We will create educational frameworks, materials, processes and environments that enable effective learning experiences for responsible Leadership. The Business Ethics Task Force (established in July 2010) aims to improve student objectives and outcomes with the business ethics courses; devise strategies to make the business ethics courses complement to the student-led societies; explore possible ways to facilitate the implementation of the business ethics course and construct the management structure of the business ethics course. 2.3 Principle 4: Research We will engage in conceptual and empirical research that advances our understanding about the role, dynamics, and impact of corporations in the creation of sustainable social, environmental and economic value. Mr. Pak To Chan in Department of Finance, HKUST cooperated with Prof. Terry Walter from University Technology Sydney. They have done some work on the economic value of Green investments and environmentally-friendly firms. Their empirical paper will be submitted to a finance journal for publication. Prof. Entela Benz in Department of Finance, HKUST is interested in the Impact Investment Measurement and Investment Sustainability. The last two years, Prof. Entela Benz has carried out some quantitative and qualitative analysis on different projects, ranging from Charities to Venture Philanthropy Investment. For example, impact measurement of a very successful charity in the Philippines. The objective of research is to measure not just change in the community, but also a statistically meaningful impact in the absence of any other community development not related to the charity work. The work is three dimensional, as it measures values, Health and Livelihood. Prof. Entela Benz and her team are also looking at redefining a more comprehensive Poverty Score for that purpose. Next step is to analyze the factors that lead to the household income increase, such as demographics, education, household size etc. In addition, Prof. Entela Benz is also advising and consulting a HK social enterprise that directs venture philanthropic capital into social businesses that are likely to have positive social change. More specifically, she has complied a comprehensive score card to screen, rate, monitor and progressively improve the various projects they invest into. The score card aims at measuring the social and environmental impact in addition to the economic value of the business. For one of the business, Prof. Entela Benz and her team have developed a filtering card that enables the firm to hire the most promising candidates, i.e., the ones that are less likely to relapse into drugs. They also come up with surveys that measure life and work satisfaction. 2.4. Principle 5: Partnership and Dialogue We will interact with managers of business corporations to extend our knowledge of their challenges in meeting social and environmental responsibilities and to explore jointly effective approaches to meeting these challenges. For each undergraduate and postgraduate course, we invite different guest speakers from companies to give our students more deep views and practical examples. The students are also required to apply what they leaned inside class to the real world business in course projects. In Social Entrepreneurship and Venture Philanthropy course, industry experts came in to give 4 seminars/workshops covered topics in: Social Enterprise/organizations: Building and managing non-profits and organizations focused on social development Venture Philanthropy: Context, aims, key developments & how it works Venture Philanthropy: How do to it (process, mechanics), case studies, building and measure social impact Private Equity: Conducting due diligence Venture Capital: Structuring funding and deliverables There also are mentors from business corporations to provide support for the real life study and case projects (such as Market Sector Research Report, Due Diligence Report, Investment Proposal, Implementation Plan, and End-of-project Evaluation Report): 1-2 mentors from Hong Kong Family Foundations involved in Venture Philanthropy; 1-2 mentors drawn from the HK social entrepreneurship community e.g. SOW Asia, Asian Venture Philanthropy Network, Social Ventures Hong Kong, Avantage Ventures; 1-2 mentors drawn from SVPI network or senior members/contributors [Social Venture Partners International (SVPI) provided support to this elective and shared their best practice methodology and templates for evaluation, due diligence, criteria setting, measurement etc.) Prof. Entela Benz in Department of Finance, HKUST let her postgraduate and undergraduate students involved in her research projects. For example, one of the undergraduate students is in regular contact with the project manager, the full time workers as well as the work candidates that come from drug rehabilitations centers, has increased his understanding of the challenges of the social business face daily and the need for sustainability. Principle 6: Dialogue We will facilitate and support dialogue and debate among educators, business, government, consumers, media, civil society organizations and other interested groups and stakeholders on critical issues related to global social responsibility and sustainability. In March, 2013, Prof. Mark Mihorean in Department of Management, HKUST organized a mini-conference on Teaching Business Ethics. A group of Instructors who teach related Business Ethics courses from the local universities came together and shared their insights and ideas about teaching Business Ethics courses. 3. Key objectives for the next 18-month period with regard to the implementation of the Principles The university education moved forward from 3-year undergraduate program to 4-year programs in 2012, HKUST Business School is taking this once in a life time opportunity to revamp the Business and Ethics education by increasing the current one-credit compulsory course under the 3-year curriculum to two 2-credit compulsory courses under the 4-year curriculum. Starting from the Fall of 2012, students under the 4-year curriculum take the first 2-credit business ethics course in their first year of study. And students will complete the second, senior level 2-credit course in their third year of study, namely, Business Ethics and Social Responsibility, will offer to our students in the coming year. 4. Desired support (meetings, tools, best example, implementation guidelines…) from the PRME community which could help most in achieving your objectives for the next 18 months. Provide potential international Service Learning programs for HKUST students to participate and contribute. 5. Sustainability on campus HKUST School of Business and Management’s educational programs targeted at “Responsible Management” will be sustained by the commitments from all members in the Business School as well as the University through our formal curriculum.