George Mason University has gained a well-deserved reputation for academic excellence. It is home to leading research institutes and claims Nobel Laureates and Pulitzer Prize winners among the faculty in the Law and Economics Center. Our EMBA students benefit from this distinction and learn from prize-winning and other acclaimed faculty members.
The School of Management is proud of its outstanding faculty. Professors who teach in the Mason EMBA program are chosen for their scholarship, research, and business connections. Ninety percent of EMBA professors are full-time faculty members in the School of Management, and all have terminal degrees and enjoy national reputations in their respective fields. EMBA faculty members are dedicated to executive education, promoting a collegial yet dynamic classroom environment, and are available to their students for discussions and advice.
EMBA faculty members live, work, and consult in the Washington, D.C., region and connect the business environment to the classroom, bringing real-world experience to your classes.
Some of the professors who teach in the George Mason University EMBA program include:
Roy Hinton, PhD, Northwestern University
Associate Dean, Executive Programs and Director of the Executive MBA program
Karen Hallows, PhD, University of Nebraska
Assistant Professor of Finance
Michelle Marks, PhD, George Mason University
Associate Professor of Management
Mahesh Joshi, PhD, Temple University
Associate Professor of Management
Gopal Krishnan, PhD, University of North Texas
Associate Professor of Accounting
John H. Crockett, PhD, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Professor of Finance and Chartered Financial Analyst
Stephen E. Christophe, PhD, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Assistant Professor of Finance
Sidhartha "Sid" R. Das, PhD, University of Houston
Associate Professor of Operations Management
Sarah Nutter, PhD, Michigan State University
Associate Professor of Accounting
INSIDE MASON
“The diversity of Mason’s MBA community expands my business acumen. Team projects are not just an exercise in management and cooperation, they are a global education—an experience that gives me a new perspective on how cultures and people perceive and approach problems differently. ”
Dave FarrisInfrastructure Safety ManagerGeorge Mason UniversityFAST FACT
The School of Management is located in Northern Virginia, one of the most important technology corridors in the U.S. and minutes from Washington, D.C.