Mitch weiss st jude
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Mitch Weiss is the Richard L. Menschel Professor of Management Practice in the Entrepreneurial Management Unit at the Harvard Business School. He created and teaches the school’s course on Public Entrepreneurship. He also chairs the first year of the school’s MBA program. He is also the creator of the “Storrowed” generative AI exercise and has helped thousands of educators and public officials evaluate the implications of AI in their work. He has twice been honored with the Apgar Award for Innovation in Teaching and is a Greenhill Award recipient. He helped build the Young American Leaders Program at Harvard Business School and is a senior advisor to the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative. Mitch’s work and the Public Entrepreneurship course has been referenced in The Wall Street Journal, CNBC, and POLITICO, among other outlets. He is the author of We the Possibility from Harvard Business Review Press (2021). Mitch has been named one of the 100 most influential academics in government.
Prior to joining HBS in 2014, Mitch was Chief of Staff and a partner to Boston
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We the Possibility
Harnessing Public Entrepreneurship to Solve Our Most Urgent Problems
Can we solve big public problems anymore? Yes, we can. The huge challenges we face are daunting indeed. At the same time, we've come to accept the sad notion that government can't do new things or solve tough problems—it's too big, too slow, and mired in bureaucracy. Not so, says former public official, now Harvard Business School professor, Mitchell Weiss. The truth is, entrepreneurial spirit and savvy in government are growing, transforming the public sector's response to big problems at all levels. The key, Weiss argues, is a shift from a mindset of Probability Government—overly focused on safe solutions and mimicking so-called best practices—to Possibility Government. This means public leadership and management that's willing to boldly imagine new possibilities and to experiment. Weiss shares the three basic tenets of this new way of governing: Government that can imagine; Government that can try new things; Government that can scale.
"Storrowed": A Generative AI Exercise
"Storrowed"
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Mitch Weiss
American investigative journalist and editor
For the fine art photographer, see Mitch Weiss (photographer).
Mitchell S. Weiss (born 1957) is an American investigative journalist, and an editor at The Charlotte Observer. He won the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting, with Joe Mahr and Michael D. Sallah.[1]
Life
Weiss is a native of New York City. He graduated from Northwestern University with an MS in journalism in 1982. He was an Associated Press reporter in Toledo and Columbus, Ohio. From 1998 to 2005 he worked for The Blade. In 2005, he was deputy business editor of The Charlotte Observer. In 2008, he was correspondent to the Charlotte Bureau of the Associated Press.
Weiss teaches journalism at the University of South Carolina Upstate.[2][3] He was a finalist for the Gerald Loeb Award in 2009.[4]
Works
References
External links
Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting | ||
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Previously the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time from 1953–1963 a
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