UCI students learn the biz
Jeff Benson
Business students typically work toward a higher standard of life and
higher-paying jobs than most people. But at least one group of
students from the UC Irvine Graduate School of Management MBA program
refuses to neglect those who may not be as fortunate.
Eleven UCI MBA students have been helping out behind the scenes at
Costa Mesa nonprofit shelter Share Our Selves. They haven’t been
working with the shelter’s 1,500 needy families directly, but instead
are operating the day-to-day food-delivery system, streamlining the
agency’s check-writing system and holding bake-sale fundraisers.
“By seeing a side of Orange County that few people see -- where
people live in poverty -- you definitely gain a perspective,” said
UCI Graduate School of Management spokesman David Lim. “Hopefully, it
will help them make decisions and keep a bigger picture of things.”
Many of the students’ volunteer contributions provided them with
analytical skills and real-life experiences that aren’t covered in
their classes, so they can learn about how nonprofit agencies are run
and adapt their findings to their own final projects, Lim said.
“Ethics and social responsibility are the big buzzwords in
business these days,” Lim said. “If you look at the other MBA
programs, they’ll say they stress social responsibility.”
Some among the MBA students said they’re donating their time
simply for personal fulfillment.
Second-year MBA student Jeff Barkehanai said he’s volunteered at
Share Our Selves for a year and a half by organizing the food pantry
and the Adopt-a-Family drop-off center at the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Local families and organizations dropped
off food and gifts to families they sponsored for the holidays.
Barkehanai and several others helped enter their personal data into a
database for recordkeeping.
“We sit down and talk to Share Our Selves organizers for various
projects,” Barkehanai said. “We’ve looked through the operations of
food delivery, and others took a look at what type of monetary funds
should be given people and what is the operational way to do it
without fraud. It’s certainly opened my eyes to the aspects of a
nonprofit.”
The business program has viewed Share Our Selves for several years
as an ideal way to earn credit toward Challenge for Charity, which is
a competition among university MBA programs to donate hours and money
to local charities. Awards will be presented in March to the schools
that donated the most money and hours, Barkehanai said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.