
History
In June of Academic Year 1974-1975,
the first graduate program in Business and Management,
the Bachelor of Business Management-Master in Business
Administration (BBM-MBA), was offered in the University
through the College of Business Administration (CBA). Aimed
to develop entrepreneurs and management consultants for
small and medium sized industries, the BBM-MBA program
became the springboard of innovative and timely programs
in business and public management.
On 10 October 1977, the Master in Government Management
was initially offered in response to the representation of the
Chairman of the Commission on Audit (COA) for the development
of a corps of effective government administrators. Likewise,
on 18 February 1980, the Master in Business Administration-Top Executive Program, for the top executives and supervisors;
on 16 March 1981, the straight Master in Business Administration
for professionals who hold a baccalaureate degree
in business or management, and on 27 November 1985, the
Doctor of Business Administration.
From the years 1979 to 1983, all graduate programs were
under the Graduate College headed by the Dean. During the
Academic Year 1983-1984, Graduate Schools were restructured
vertically, hence, the birth of the Graduate School of Management,
under the administration of the Dean of CBA. On 01 September 1989, all graduate programs were placed under one Dean assisted
by a Director for each of the graduate program, such as the
Graduate Programs in Management (GPM).
Vision
Legendary Center for the Development of Professionals
and Leaders in Business and Public Service
Mission
Nurture professionalism, leadership, community relations
through excellent management education, training, research
and extension service.
Objectives
• Strengthen the competencies of key players in business
and government by engaging the students in:
- identifying, analyzing, and contextualizing theories and
current issues related to global awareness, management,
organization design, planning and administration, decisionmaking,
corporate culture, teamwork, strategic action,
motivation, and ethics.
- examining critically whether in the classroom, in research,
or lifelong learning, the material and virtual manifestations
in business and public service, as they contribute to the
advancement of knowledge and refinement of service to
society.
• Enhance the students' responsibility to continually develop
them, improve their performance and those of the people
they work with in order to deliver their products and services
more efficiently, profitably, and to the highest standards of
quality.