2016 press kit - hult prize · 2017-07-12 · press kit. 2 hultprize.org dear friends, ... 8:30...
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2016Press Kit
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Dear Friends,
On behalf of our partners President Bill Clinton, Hult International Business School and EF, Education First, thank you for your ongoing support of The Hult Prize Foundation.
The Hult Prize is an entrepreneurship challenge that aims to turn ideas into impact. In the past seven years, the Hult Prize has grown into a benchmark competition that enables any college or university student in the world to tackle the most pressing issues facing billions of people.
We created the Hult Prize to launch a new era of entrepreneurs, those who would build for-good, for-profit start-ups to meet the ever important demands of 21st century development.
We hope you’ll be as inspired as we are by the people and ideas you’ll come across as you learn more about our organization and mission.
Thank you for joining us.
Warm regards,
Dr. Stephen Hodges President Hult International Business School
Ahmad Ashkar Chief Executive Officer Hult Prize Foundation
Welcome
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How willyou changethe worldwith USD1 million?
The Hult Prize competition is a call to action for the world’s brightest minds to tackle the world’s most pressing issues.
by Yves Béhar, ‘13
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Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus speaking at the 2015 Hult Prize Global Final
“If you can create a real business, the beginning of a prototype, you can change the world.”Muhammad Yunus 2006 Nobel Peace Prize Winner
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7:00 Opening remarks by Dr. Stephen Hodges and Ahmad Ashkar
7:15 Progress report by Taylor Scobbie, CEO and co-Founder, IMPCT—2015 Hult Prize Winner
7:20 Key Note Address by Muhammad Yunus
7:30 Five finalists pitch start-ups
8:30 Intermission
9:30 2017 Hult Prize Challenge and 2016 Winner announced by President Clinton
2016 Finals Schedule on September 20th
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Meet the Next Generation of Social Entrepreneurs
President Clinton and the winners of the Hult Prize 2015 from Taiwan’s National Chengchi University for their proposal to build and support early education through a global social enterprise that franchises local day care centers
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Founded in 2009 by Hult International Business School graduate Ahmad Ashkar, the Hult Prize has become the world’s largest student competition and open innovation platform for social good.
Each year, in partnership with President Bill Clinton and Hult International Business School, the Hult Prize challenges students around the world to develop innovative social enterprises that can transform lives. The goal? To tackle the world’s most pressing global issues, from poverty to affordable housing.
Winners receive USD 1 million in seed capital, as well as mentorship and advice from international business leaders to help launch their ideas. Local campus, city and in-country competitions are held each fall, followed by regional semi-final contests held in the spring at Hult International Business School campuses in Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai, and Shanghai, culminating in a final competition and awards ceremony held in New York during the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting. Regional event winners are also invited to join the summer Hult Prize Incubator Program hosted by the Hult International Business School in Boston, MA.
The Hult Prize is made possible through the support of the Hult family.
The Hult Prize
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Now in its seventh year, the Hult Prize has directly impacted the lives of nearly 100,000 college and university student participants from nearly every country in the world.
By pushing business students to engage with the world’s most challenging problems—something not covered by the typical business school curriculum—the Hult Prize helps create a new generation of entrepreneurs, one that’s transforming the way the world thinks and does
business. Every year, hundreds of social enterprise startups get launched, while thousands more are inspired. With the Hult Prize, we’re building a community to help such enterprises—as well as the entrepreneurs behind them—flourish in the long term.
In fact, no less than 14 Hult Prize finalists were named on this year’s Forbes prestigious “30 Under 30” list as game-changing social entrepreneurs.
The Hult Prize Impact
The inaugural Hult Prize was originally called the Hult Global Case Challenge. It brought together over 300 of the world’s leading MBA, graduate, and undergraduate students in Boston, London, Dubai, and Shanghai to present strategies to One Laptop per Child, a U.S. non-profit organization. The challenge was to help OLPC achieve its goal of providing educational opportunities for the world’s poorest children by developing, producing, and distributing affordable laptops.
2010 Education
2011 Clean Water
2012 Energy
From ways to provide clean water to food security, the ideas inspired by the Hult Prize help change lives as well as careers.
A Look Back at the Hult Prize
In 2011, the Hult Prize teamed up with Matt Damon and Water.org to inspire students to tackle the world’s clean water crisis. A team from the University of Cambridge, led by Akanksha Hazari, was ultimately crowned the winner. The Cambridge team designed an innovative incentive scheme , where those living at the bottom of the economic pyramid could pool loyalty points from certain telecom partners and use the points to fund clean water and sanitation projects.
The theme of the 2012 Hult Prize was energy. Students from around the world were called to action to develop social enterprises which could eliminate the use of the kerosene lamp in Africa by 2018 through collaborating with NGO partner, Solar Aid. The winning team came out of the New York University (Abu Dhabi campus) and today, Sunny Money is one of the largest distributors of solar lights in Africa and the world.
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2013 Food Crisis
2014 Healthcare
2015 Early Childhood Development
The Global Food Crisis was personally selected by President Bill Clinton, who called on university students around the world to help eradicate one of today’s most critical, yet solvable, issues. The winning team from McGill University proposed an enterprise, called Aspire Food Group, to grow, process, and sell edible insects. Today, Aspire is one of the largest commercial manufacturers of insects for human food consumption in the world, with established locations in USA, Mexico and Ghana.
Hult Prize addressed the pressing challenge posed by chronic, non-communicable diseases (NCDs)—including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, cancer, and chronic respiratory diseases—and their highly related mental and behavioral health conditions. The winning team from the Indian School of Business, Nanohealth, created a Doc-in-a-Bag™ that allows medical workers to diagnose and monitor NCDs remotely and upload data to the cloud.
Last year’s challenge tackled the lack of quality early childhood education in urban slums. Students were challenged to provide quality early education to 10 million children under age six in urban slums by 2020. The winning team from Taiwan’s National Chengchi University proposed a global social enterprise, IMPCT, which builds and supports early education franchises in exisiting informal day cares run by locals.
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Taylor Scobbie
CEO and Founder, IMPCT
Taylor is the CEO and founder of IMPCT, a social enterprise
dedicated to building beautiful play-based preschools for
the developing world’s urban poor. Their Playcare franchise
empowers women in urban slums to bring the power of play-
based education to local families and is quickly becoming
a fixture in communities from El Salvador and Guatemala to
South Africa. Their Factory Playcare, on the other hand, is
Latin America’s first at-work preschool solution. It enables local
companies to run quality educational daycares for their workers’
children, reducing churn and allowing employees peace of mind
knowing their children are safe nearby.
Taylor was born and raised in Calgary, Canada and has a
Bachelor’s degree in both Finance and Philosophy from the
University of Calgary. After working for four years in finance and
IT consulting he made the leap to Taiwan to pursue an MBA
degree under scholarship from the Taiwanese government.
There he met his IMPCT co-founders and embarked on the
incredible Hult Prize journey, unlocking the opportunity to use
his business background to build a better future for the world’s
most vulnerable children.
About IMPCT
IMPCT is an early education social enterprise specializing
in building quality play-based classrooms (Playcares) for
at-risk families in the developing world. Their Playcare
building Farm to Future platform and line of direct impact
products is currently one of East Asia’s fastest growing
ethical products brands.
Profile of 2015 Hult Prize Winner
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Manish Ranjan
CEO and Co-Founder, NanoHealth
Manish is the CEO and co-founder of NanoHealth, a social
enterprise striving to change the face of urban healthcare by
solving the rising burden of chronic diseases in urban slums.
NanoHealth was founded while Manish was studying for his
MBA at the Indian School of Business, where he received the
Torchbearer award for outstanding leadership. An engineering
graduate from the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai,
Manish worked as a consultant helping large multinationals
boost their business processes’ efficiency. He now applies
his extensive experience to improve healthcare processes for
addressing critical health challenges.
Manish believes in the power of enterprises to have sustainable
impact. He is actively engaged in developing the social
enterprise ecosystem and is a regular speaker at events.
About NanoHealth
NanoHealth is a social enterprise specializing in chronic
disease management in urban slums. NanoHealth creates a
network of community health workers called “Saathis” and
equips them with low-cost point of care devices called
Doc-in-a-Bag™. With the help of the right care model and
scalable technology, NanoHealth promises a winning model
for the fight against chronic disease and aims to prevent a
million premature deaths every year. NanoHealth is currently
scaling its services in south India.
Profile of 2014 Hult Prize Winner
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Mohammed Ashour
CEO and Founder, Aspire Food Group
Mohammed is the CEO and co-founder of one of the fastest
growing companies on the planet and winner of the 2013
Hult Prize, Aspire Food Group. A commercial manufacturer of
alternative protein sources such as insects, Aspire has re-
imagined the livestock industry and as a result has created
an innovative sector, which they are currently leading: Micro-
Livestock. Local and international manufacturing facilities
weaved into a micro-works business model has led to the rapid
scale of an organization the United Nations calls “a company
whose time has a come” for their disruptive approach to global
food insecurity. Mohammed is a globe trotter, currently looking
after manufacturing, production and distribution facilities in
Ghana, Mexico and Texas.
An accomplished academic and practioner, Mr. Ashour is a
Resident Doctor of Medicine and holds a Master of Surgery
degree (MD, CM) from the Faculty of Medicine, and a MBA
from the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University.
Mohammed also completed a Master Degree in neuroscience
(M.Sc.) at McGill University and a Bachelor of Life Sciences (B.Sc.)
at the University of Toronto.
About Aspire Food Group
Aspire Foods is the world’s largest producer of insects and
insect by-products exclusively for human consumption. Their
mission is to eliminate food insecurity through the mega-
farming of alternative protein.
Profile of 2013 Hult Prize Winner
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• Almost 1.5 billion people living in crowded spaces worldwide are struggling.
• People don’t make enough money, they can’t reach where they need to be, and they are living in unsafe spaces that lack infrastructure and connection to basic services.
• Costs associated with mobility make it so that people are forced to work where they live and live where they work. People may not be able to afford the cost of looking for work, which makes the price of commuting every day completely unreachable.
• Because people don’t have enough money, and the communities they live in are difficult to serve, basic needs remain unmet. Goods and services are either too far away or too expensive.
• While not all crowded urban spaces are illegal, many, including the slums that house one billion people worldwide, are informal. This means people living in these areas lack support from the government and access to utilities.
• Crowded spaces are difficult. As rural populations around the world migrate to city centers in pursuit of a better life, they often add strain and hardship to both themselves and the spaces they occupy.
• Poverty camps exist in all places of the world. Social welfare dictates where the poor live, what schools children must attend, and what types of services are available. Lack of education and economic opportunity has created a downward cycle of poverty that is difficult to break.
This year, the Hult Prize President’s Challenge is Crowded Urban Spaces: doubling the incomes of 1 million crowded urban space dwellers by 2022. The challenge asks teams to build sustainable and scalable social enterprises that double the income of 1 million people residing in crowded urban spaces by better connecting people, goods, services, and capital.
2016 Hult Prize President’s Challenge
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Bill Clinton 42nd President of the United States
2016 Hult Prize Final’s Speakers and Judges
Judges
Stephen Hodges President Hult International Business School
John Chambers Executive Chairman Cisco
Bob Collymore Chief Executive OfficerSafaricom
Premal Shah PresidentKiva.org
Muhammad Yunus 2006 Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Ahmad Ashkar Chief Executive OfficerHult Prize Foundation
Akinwumi AdesinaPresident African Development Bank
Kathleen Rogers Chief Executive OfficerEarth Day Network
Mohammed Ashour CEO Aspire Food Group
Brian Fetherstonhaugh Chairman & CEOOgilvyOne Worldwide
Speakers
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2016 Regional WinnersThis year’s five regional finalists hail from around the globe with some of the most transformative ideas in the space. They represent the very best of more than 25,000 applicants who began this year’s Hult Prize journey. The ideas presented by these teams are the product of rigorous competition, hours of hard work, and a relentless commitment to changing the world.
The finalists competed against participating students from over 150 countries, who collectively represent more than 650 colleges and universities from around the world. Their startups are innovative, disruptive, and catalytic. The five strongest teams were selected by a group of judges that includes top-tier executives from the private, public, and nonprofit sectors. Their ideas are now one step closer to changing the lives of billions around the world.
In Sub- Saharan Africa, the existing $29Bn street food vending industry has not been harnessed to reach it’s full potential. Musana Carts sees an opportunity to revolutionize this age old business. Musana Carts provides a clean and licensed food cart to actors of the shadow economy, ultimately doubling their current income. Musana carts is the only organization providing a highly refined multi-revenue generating engine for street vendors in Africa, that includes a financing program as well as business skills and WASH training. In Uganda, where our pilot is running, we have established a unique partnership with the city, making us their implementation partner for street food licenses. The Musana Carts vision is to create more collaborative cities, giving people who do not have jobs a legitimate chance and giving hard workers the capability to become more profitable. Our idea is incredibly simple and it is already doubling incomes.
Uber is the largest taxi company in the world that owns no cars. Magic Bus Ticketing will be the largest bus ticketing service that owns no buses. In emerging markets, access to public transportation has become more important due to urban sprawling. In Africa, this system is based on informal minibuses that do not follow set timetables or consistent prices; both commuters and bus drivers face huge amounts of uncertainty. Magic Bus aims to connect the buses to the commuters through an offline technology that serves as an automated ticketing service. We allow the bus to know the demand along the route hence reduce waiting time, make more trips per day and double their income. Our primary strategy is to develop Magic Bus as the preferred method for buying public bus tickets as the most convenient and cost effective alternative to long waiting times and inconsistent fares.
Magic Bus Earlham College
Musana Carts Hult International Business School
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There are hundreds of organizations globally trying to increase the incomes of poor slum dwellers by delivering critical services in education, health, finance, and beyond. However, these efforts are plagued by identification challenges. Without the ability to uniquely identify their beneficiaries, NGOs and governments struggle to scale the very services that could lift the poor out of poverty. Simprints is a simple, seamless biometric solution that allows organizations to identify beneficiaries anytime, anywhere with just the touch of a finger. Our software is customized to deal with the scarred, worn, and burned fingerprint profiles common among the world’s poorest citizens—something the biometrics industry has never done before. Simprints enables a consistent digital record for the poorest and most marginalized slum dwellers, empowering our clients to deliver the key services in education, finance, and healthcare needed to double incomes.
Synergy Global BRAC University
PROtrash Tecnológico de Monterrey
Simprints University of Cambridge
People in marginalized communities lack access to dignified job opportunities. With NGO interventions, many have ben traing in sewing and tailoring skills, yet they still suffer from unemployment or worse, end up working in garment sweat shops. Worldiwde, over 46m work in conditions considered as modern day slavery. On the other hand many of the fashion brands trying to solve this problem have had to develop their own ethical manufacturing supply chains which is a costly, time consuming, process with limited yields. Synergy Global is an online platform that provides and ethical manufacturing supply chain of highly skulled workers from marginalized communities to fashion brands that demand ethically made clothing. Our solution allows fashion brands to immediately bring their designs to life while creating high-paying dignified earning solutions for millions at the bottom of the pyramid.
In Mexico only 11% of the total recyclable waste is collected, and the remaining 89% is left unattended and not recycled. This garbage ends up pilling up in low-income communities. PROtrash is targeting the 24 billion dollar market opportunity provided by un-recycled trash in Mexico. PROtrash will create financial incentives for communities to collect and deliver their own trash, increase the volume of recyclable waste, and re-distribute the wealth within the community. PROtrash is a social enterprise, dedicated to optimizing the recycling industry in Mexico and at the same time helping people in low-income communities to acquire monetary value for their recyclable waste. One of our main objectives is to create more disposable income through recyclable waste for families living in urban crowded spaces in Mexico. As an outcome, we will create an economic accelerator in these communities.
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The Hult Prize support team includes:
• Action coaches • 24/7 facilitator • Panel of advisors • Subject-matter experts • Industry leaders • External networks
Hult Prize Incubator
Program Structure Each week, startups focus on one broad topic (eight in total throughout the program), spend one day in the classroom, four days in the field, and pitch to an audience of judges on Friday. Topics range from understanding your customer to refining your business model. Facilities Hult Prize provides every team with state-of-the-art office space that includes classrooms, an auditorium, a cafeteria, and mail/print services. Entrepreneurs are also provided with shared living spaces that include social opportunities and custom content in an informal and friendly setting. Coaching Coaches spend a minimum of 2-4 hours per week working closely with the teams to help draft business plans, refine business models and value proposition, secure their first customers, build partnerships, and gain access to valuable networks. Mentorship Incubator speakers provide 30-45 minute presentations followed by general Q&A sessions. Teams are given the opportunity to sign up for one-on-one time with every speaker for individualized support and ongoing mentorship. Feedback Over the course of the accelerator, the teams spend a combined time of almost 100 hours pitching to investors and expert judges from leading corporations and academic institutions and receiving detailed actionable feedback.
Workshops Workshops at the Hult Prize Incubator take place once or twice a week, and they are held in an open classroom setting. Entrepreneurs work within teams on the assigned exercises, with a particular emphasis on hands-on learning and results. Networking Networking activities are an integral part of the incubation program, as they help entrepreneurs develop personal relationships with fellow competitors, build lifelong friendships, broaden their networks, and cross-pollinate ideas. Incubator Key Statistics • Teams were exposed to more than 100 expert investors, coaches, judges, speakers, and entrepreneurs in one-on- one sessions totaling more than 400 hours of support
• Teams spent more than 100 combined hours pitching, more than 150 hours working directly with their coaches, and more than 100 hours in one-on-one sessions with VIP speakers
• The incubator guided teams through a eight-week curriculum with 14 expert- run workshops
• The incubator featured more than 20 social events to help teams build camaraderie and cooperation
• More than 25 corporate and foundation supporters provided content to the accelerator program
• Expert legal and corporate advisory assuring each company is investment ready and fully bankable
The Hult Prize start-up incubator is a cutting-edge, eight-week program that runs every summer at Hult International Business School’s Boston campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Each year, the top five finalist startups from the Hult Prize competition are provided with living and working spaces, along with the opportunity to hone their business skills, network with business and academic leaders, register their entities, and prepare for launch.
The innovative program includes weekly classes, speakers, workshops, pitches, and multi-disciplinary expert coaches and mentors who guide the startups through some of their most critical inputs. The incubator supports teams as they register legal entities, draft founders’ agreements, brainstorm ideas, pilot their offerings, design their marketing materials, refine business models, prototype, secure their first customers, and finalize business plans. There is a deliberate focus on real, market-driven artifacts and results.
Partners this year included the Hult International Business School, Mintz Levin, EF, MASS Design Group, Common Cove, Oxfam America, MIT, MassChallenge, WeWork and Google.
The Hult Prize approach involves bringing together some of the most passionate people across disciplines to solve well-defined challenges through rapid ideation, prototyping, iteration, and measurement. The incubator is a central element of this process, and seeks to ‘graduate’ startups whose teams are fully engaged and whose products and services are ready for market launch.
A leading boot-camp style eight-week incubation program for social entrepreneurs
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2016 Content Partners/Supporters:
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The Hult Prize is sponsored by Hult International Business School, which hosts the competition’s regional finals on its five international campuses in Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai, and Shanghai. The final round is held on the first day of the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting in New York.
Hult International Business School is named after Bertil Hult, founder of EF Education First, the world’s leading privately held international education company. Hult is the world’s most international business school.
Among the world’s leading business schools, Hult is at the forefront of the movement to develop social entrepreneurship. The Hult Prize is a key aspect of the school’s commitment to social good, showcasing Hult’s conviction that the world’s most pressing social problems can be addressed by entrepreneurial solutions. Unlike other business case competitions geared towards solving standard business challenges, the Hult Prize engages students to use their skills and training to take on large-scale problems, from access to clean water to education.
Established in 1964
1964 Arthur D. Little Inc., the world’s oldest management consulting firm, establishes the Management Education Institute, developing an innovative, accelerated one-year Master degree program to train business leaders.
1976 The business school is officially accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC), the regional accrediting body for all academic institutions in the northeastern U.S.
1998 Forbes identifies the school’s Action Learning curriculum as “highly distinctive,” ranking it in the top five MBA programs in the U.S.
2002 The Economist ranks the school as the third-best business school in Massachusetts, after Harvard Business School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
2003 The school is renamed Hult International Business School, honoring benefactor Bertil Hult’s personal vision and commitment to educating global business leaders.
2005 Hult’s one-year MBA program earns the accreditation of the Association of MBAs (AMBA), making Hult the first business school in the U.S. to be recognized by this prestigious international accrediting body.
2008 Hult welcomes its first class of students to the MBA program in Dubai. Hult is the first U.S. academic institution to be licensed in the U.A.E.
Hult InternationalBusiness School
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2010 The first Hult Global Case Challenge is launched in partnership with One Laptop per Child to crowdsource student ideas and revolutionize the business of giving. Hult adds a one-year Master in International Marketing degree. The school opens its second U.S. campus in downtown San Francisco.
2011 Hult launches a Master of Social Entrepreneurship degree and a Master of Finance degree. The school is ranked #3 in International Business by the Financial Times. Hult’s campus in China opens in the heart of Shanghai. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton presents a USD 1 million prize to Water.org at the Hult Global Case Challenge Final.
2012 Hult becomes the world’s largest ranked graduate business school. The Hult Global Case Challenge is renamed the Hult Prize.
2013 The Hult Prize Final is held at the Clinton GIobal Initiative’s Annual Meeting in New York, after finalists are trained through the Hult Prize Incubator Program. Hult Labs releases groundbreaking research on the future of the MBA.
2014 Hult opens its first U.S. undergraduate campus in San Francisco. The Association of MBAs (AMBA) gives the “Innovation Award” to Hult’s MBA curriculum, the world’s first curriculum designed in collaboration with global business leaders and employers.
2015 Hult International Business School and Ashridge Business School form a strategic alliance to create the world’s most global business school.
Hult Boston
Hult San Francisco
Hult London
Hult Dubai
Hult Shanghai
Ashridge Estate, U.K.
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EF Education First was founded in Sweden in 1965 by young entrepreneur Bertil Hult. The concept was straightforward: take local high school students to England to learn English. It was a simple business idea—on-site language and cultural studies—but one with an enormous future.
Today, EF Education First is the world leader in international education focusing on language, academics, and cultural experience. EF operates more than 500 schools and offices in 53 countries and has a network of more than 43,500 teachers and staff.
EF’s mission is more relevant than ever as today’s world becomes increasingly complex and interdependent. Cross-cultural communication and understanding are vital for long-term success. EF’s programs enable everyone to make the world their classroom.
Educational Travel We offer international tours that provide rich cultural experiences and hands-on learning for middle school students, high school students, college students, and adult travelers interested in exploring the world.
Our Programs
Language Training Learn a new language at an EF English Center locally, at an EF International Language Center abroad, or online at englishlive.com. Or, travel abroad and learn in a native country where culture and language come to life.
Cultural Exchange Live with American families, providing childcare in exchange for housing or attending educational courses as an exchange student.
Academic and Degree Programs From International Baccalaureate diplomas to university preparatory programs.
EF Education First
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Hult Prize Participating Schools (2016)Boston
Babson College Boston College Brandeis University Brown University College of William & Mary Columbia University Cornell University Duke University Earlham College ESADE Faculdades Integradas Rio Branco George Washington University Georgia Institute of Technology Harvard Business School Harvard University HEC Montreal Hult International Business School, Boston IIT Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur Indiana University Johns Hopkins University Massachusetts Institute of Technology McGill University Monterey Institute of International Studies at Monterey New York University-Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development Northeastern University Northwestern University–Kellogg School of Management Princeton University Queen’s University–Smith School of Business Rutgers University-Newark Tecnológico de Monterrey University of California, Irvine-The Paul Merage School of Business University of Central Florida University of Cincinnati-Carl H. Lindner College of Business University of Iowa University of Pennsylvania University of Tampa University of the West Indies, Mona University of Virginia University of Waterloo
University of Western Ontario University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Business Villanova University Washington University-Olin Business School Yale University York University-Schulich School of Business
San Francisco
Arizona State University Claremont McKenna College Colorado State University, Fort Collins Cornell University Duke University Ege University Emory University Florida International University Gonzaga University Hult International Business School, San Francisco Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur London School of Economics and Political Science McGill University Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey National Chengchi University Northwestern University Ontario College of Art and Design Oregon State University Pinchot University Saint Mary’s College of California Stanford University Tecnológico de Monterrey The American University in Cairo The British University in Egypt The Ohio State University Universidad de Oriente Université de M’hamed Bougara Boumerdes University of Calgary University of California, Berkeley University of California, Irvine UCLA-Anderson School of Management University of California, San Diego University of California, Santa Barbara University of California, Santa Cruz University of Cambridge
University of Central Florida University of Chicago-Booth School of Business University of Hawai’i at Manoa University of Michigan University of Notre Dame University of Saskatchewan University of Southern California University of St. Thomas-Opus College of Business University of Tampa University of Toronto-Rotman School of Management Vanderbilt University Warwick Business School York University-Schulich School of Business
London
Africa University American University in Cairo Aston University Ateneo De Manila University Audencia School of Management Birla Institute of Technology & Science, Pilani-Goa Bocconi University-SDA Bocconi School of Management Boise State University British University Egypt Central European University Chinese University of Hong Kong Cornell University-Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management Cranfield University École Mohammadia d’ingénieurs, Morocco École Polytechnique ENPC School of International Management Erasmus University, Rotterdam School of Management ESADE Glasgow Caledonian University Hebrew University of Jerusalem HEC Paris Hertie School of Governance Hult International Business School, London IE Business School Indian School of Business Jacobs University, Bremen London School of Economics and Political Science Lund University
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Mannheim Business School Northwestern University Royal College of Art Sabanci University Sciences Po, Paris Stockholm School of Economics Universitas Indonesia Universitat Pompeu Fabra-Barcelona School of Management University of Birmingham University of Cambridge University of Cambridge-Judge Business School University of Exeter University of Jordan University of Manchester-Manchester Business School University of Oxford University of St Andrews University of Strathclyde University of Tunis University of Warwick-Warwick Business School University of Zurich Vlerick Business School York University-Schulich School of Business
Dubai
American University of Nigeria Amity University Ashesi University, Ghana Ashoka University Asian Institute of Management Aston University Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology Bocconi University-SDA Bocconi School of Management British University Chinese University of Hong Kong Delhi Technological University École Centrale Paris Erasmus University-Rotterdam School of Management ESADE HEC Paris Hult International Business School, Dubai IE Business School Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur
Indian School of Business INSEAD Institute of Management Technology, Ghaziabad Isra University Johns Hopkins University King Abdullah University of Science and Technology Koç University London School of Economics and Political Science Middlesex University National Chengchi University National University Of Science and Technology New York University New York University, Abu Dhabi Northwestern University RMIT International University Vietnam Rollins College Universidade de Brasília University of Cambridge University of Indonesia University of Toledo University of Toronto University of Toronto-Rotman School of Management University of Virginia VERN University of Applied Sciences Western University York University-Schulich School of Business
Shanghai
Asian Institute of Management Australian National University Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology Binus International University BRAC University Chinese University of Hong Kong Dankook University Foreign Trade University, Vietnam Griffith University Hitotsubashi University Hong Kong University of Science and Technology Hult International Business School, Shanghai IE University Indian Institute of Technology J. F. Oberlin University Monash University
Nanyang Technological University National University of Singapore Ontario College of Art and Design Peking University-HSBC Business School RMIT International University Vietnam Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance Sophia University Surya University Tsinghua University University of Cambridge University of International Business and Economics University of Macau University of Nottingham, Ningbo, China University of Pennsylvania University of Shanghai for Science and Technology University of Southern California University of Tokyo University of Toronto-Rotman School of Management Vietnam National University Xingwei College Yonsei University York University-Schulich School of Business The University of Tokyo Tsinghua University University of International Business and Economics University of Macau University of Nottingham Ningbo China University of Pennsylvania University of Shanghai for Science and Technology University of Southern California University of Toronto-Rotman School of Management Xingwei College Yonsei University
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Media Contact: Jenny Harler Email: [email protected]