UPDATED: August 19, 2022
Over a decade ago, the Carroll School leadership began mapping out a big-ideas course for all first-year studentsâa course with small sections, and with the professor serving also as academic advisor for each student. That course is Portico, which continues to embody the Carroll School's unique brand of management learning, inspired by Boston College's Jesuit approach to both professional and liberal arts education.
On August 29,Ěýevery member of the Carroll School class of 2026 begins their introduction to the interdisciplinary qualities of a management education at Boston College.ĚýLearn more about the course atĚýthe Portico page. See the class in action inĚý.ĚýRead further about these innovations in an article that summarizes findings about Portico published by theĚýJournal of Jesuit Business Education.
And here, from the Carroll School News archives, is a story about one facet of Porticoâfuture leaders learning the art of self-reflection.
It is 4:00 p.m. on a Friday in Fulton 310. The lights are soft, and the whispery vocals of British singer-songwriter James Bay (âLet it Goâ) are playing in the background. Twenty first-year students are at their desks in the small classroom. Some are writing steadily in their journals. Others are pausing, pen to lip or chin resting on one hand.
The first-semester students in Professor Ethan SullivanâsĚýPorticoĚýclass are not taking a test. They are engaging in a version of âthe Examen,â a centuries-old Jesuit meditation. At the start of class each Friday, the students jot down their thoughts about what theyâre grateful for and what went right or wrong during the week. They end by setting personal goals or considering what they ought to do in the coming week.
âA lot of people would be surprised to see that this is going on in a business school,â Sullivan points out in a subsequent conversation.
Self-reflection is a signature of Portico, a required class launched seven years ago and taken by all entering students at Boston Collegeâs Carroll School of Management. With 34 sections taught by seven faculty members, the course offers a port of entry into the world of management as seen through a broadly interdisciplinary lens. Philosophy, ethics, and the social sciences are stirred into the mix.
Aristotle in the Boardroom
On a Friday in mid-November, Professor Ethan Sullivan and his Portico class bounce back and forth between Aristotle and accounting, the classics and the headlines. The day's topic is Aristotle's reflections on "voluntary" and "non-voluntary" actions.
Recent scholarship has turned attention to the value of personal reflection. Researchers have highlighted the connection between leadership and self-awareness, with some singling out the so-called âtwice bornâ leaders. These are managers and executives who failed during their first leadership incarnation precisely because they lacked such awareness.
âThe best thing leaders can do to improve their effectiveness is to become more aware of what motivates them and their decision-making,â venture capital advisorĚýĚýžą˛ÔĚýHarvard Business ReviewĚý(July 2012).
By its nature, Portico is in no small part a reflection course. The message is clear enough to anyone entering the Portico office on the 2nd floor of Fulton Hall. Hanging on a wall is a poster featuring the maroon-and-gold Portico logo and three essential questions: âHow shall I live? How shall we work together? What kind of world shall we shape?â
Loosely speaking, the class teaches business ethics, but Sullivan, who is the Carroll Schoolâs associate dean for undergraduate curriculum, says it has a broader mission. âItâs really grounded in what philosophers call the good life,â the life of meaning. All aspectsâincluding classroom discussions, case studies, group projects, reflection papers, course-based advising, and evening events featuring outside speakersâhelp plow that ground. All are geared to getting students to think deeply about management and their calling to that world.
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The Hardest Part
Perhaps the hardest part is reflecting on oneâs own experiences, desires, and motivations.
âItâs awkward at first, for freshmen,â says Professor of the PracticeĚýAmy LaCombe, who, like Sullivan and other Portico faculty, administers the Examen in her sections of the course. âExamenâ comes from the Latin word for examination and is one of the spiritual exercises introduced by St. Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus.
âTheyâre not used to thinking about decisions theyâve made, or they think about them for a moment and then the thoughts are gone,â LaCombe observes, noting that the same could be said of many mid-career executives. She cites multitasking as one big obstacle to self-reflection and the focused attention that such an exercise requires.
Yet LaCombe and other Portico professors say that in a matter of weeks, students begin acquiring the habits of reflection, which include self-evaluation.
Leigh Channell â19 agrees with LaCombeâs assessment. She says the weekly exercise has made her âaware of things that would otherwise fly under the radarâ of her consciousness. As one example, the student from Georgiaâs Sea Islands mentions that she never quite realized she had a problem with procrastination (notably with her math homework) until the theme began surfacing in her written reflections. âThe Examen made me aware of that. Iâm much more on top of my assignments now,â she says.
One time during this past fall semester, Channell had to miss a Friday Portico class to attend a special event at Episcopal High School, the boarding school she had graduated from, in Alexandria, Virginia. On the flight there, she found herself doing the Examen with pen and paper. âI realized that if I hadnât done it, I would have felt a little empty. Itâs become a big closer of my week,â she explains.
That's Gratitude
Gratitude is a key practice that Portico students learn through the weekly "Examen" meditations and other forms of self-reflection during the course.
Portico students also do what is variably called a âfinal Examenâ or âself-assessment,â a take-home reflection paper summarizing their whole semester.
In other reflections and papers, they contemplate the management concentrations or perhaps liberal arts majors they will be choosing. They also ponder their lives after graduation. That might take the form of a âdiscernmentâ paper composed after a group project focusing on a particular industry relating to their interests. In that paper, students often unpack the statement: âIn five years, I could see myself / not see myself in this industry.â
During an interview late in the fall semester, Caitlin Ferris â19 began rattling off all that the three-credit Portico class had tossed onto her plateâphilosophy, ethics, management theory, research assignments addressing particular companies and products, teamwork with other students, and the nurturing of her self-awareness.
âItâs a lot to take on for your first semester of college,â she says. âBut itâs a great way to start.â