Passage 3 Diversity: Different Strokes for Similar Folks
	MBA生源多样性变迁 《经济学人》
	[00:01]Picture a typical MBA lecture theatre twenty years ago.
	[00:07]In it the majority of students scratching away furiously
	[00:13]will have conformed to the standard model of the time: male,
	[00:18]middle class and Western. Walk into a class today, however,
	[00:24]and you'll get a completely different impression.
	[00:28]For a start you will now see plenty more women
	[00:32]the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, for example,
	[00:37]boasts that about 40% of its new intake is female.
	[00:44]You will also see a wide range of ethnic groups
	[00:48]and nationals of practically every country.
	[00:52]It might be tempting, therefore, to think
	[00:56]that the old barriers have been broken down and equal opportunity achieved.
	[01:03]But, increasingly, this apparent diversity
	[01:08]is becoming a mask for an insidious new type of conformity.
	[01:14]Behind the differences in sex and sexuality,
	[01:18]the varying skin tones and mother tongues, there are common attitudes,
	[01:24]expectations and ambitions which risk creating a set of clones
	[01:31]among the business leaders of the future.
	[01:34]A future in which the methods and motivations of geniuses in Bangalore,
	[01:40]Beijing and Boston are impossible to tell apart.
	[01:46]Many of the corporations which led us into the current economic mess
	[01:52]were also the most enthusiastic hirers of MBAs. Diversity, it seems,
	[02:01]has not helped to address fundamental weaknesses in business leadership.
	[02:07]So what can be done to create more effective attendants
	[02:12]of the commercial world? According to Valerie Gauthier,
	[02:17]associate dean at HEC Paris, the key lies in the process
	[02:24]by which MBA programmes recruit their students.
	[02:29]At the moment candidates are selected on a fairly narrow set of criteria
	[02:35]such as prior academic and career performance,
	[02:39]analytical and problem solving abilities and skills.
	[02:45]This is then coupled to a school's picture of what a diverse class
	[02:50]should look like, with the result that passport,
	[02:54]ethnic origin and sex can all become influencing factors.
	[03:00]But schools rarely dig down to find out what really makes an applicant tick,
	[03:07]to create a class which also contains diversity of attitude
	[03:12]and approach-arguably the only diversity that, in a business context,
	[03:19]really matters.
	[03:21]Professor Gauthier believes schools
	[03:24]should not just be selecting 'usual suspect' candidates
	[03:30]from traditional sectors such as banking, consultancy and industry.
	[03:36]They should also be seeking individuals who have backgrounds in areas
	[03:42]such as political science, the creative arts, history or philosophy,
	[03:49]which will allow them to put business decisions into a wider context.
	[03:56]Unless at least some students on a programme have this sort of grounding
	[04:03]and the open mind that hopefully goes with it
	[04:07]then the increasingly fashionable focus on ethics
	[04:12]and social responsibility is unlikely to
	[04:15]have a significant effect in the long term.