Manchester Magazine Spring 2014 | Page 7

MU | N e w s Grandin: Focus on what children with autism can do Why sales? A sales degree is a natural for Manchester, whose Accounting and Business Department is the University’s largest. About a fifth of undergraduate degrees are earned through the department’s programs. “We anticipate that the new sales program will serve Manchester students well regardless of the industries they choose,” says Professor Tim Ogden, department chair. “The sales function touches every organization, large and small, for-profit and nonprofit,” adds Ogden. “There are not many sales programs in Indiana, and we expect ours to be distinctive in two ways.” First, it will include a course that marries sales and entrepreneurship. In his recent book, To Sell is Human, Daniel Pink reports that “independent entrepreneurs may grow by 65 million in the rest of the decade and could become a majority of the workforce by 2020.” Second, Manchester’s program will include a communication course that focuses on the ethics of listening in sales relationships. The course will explore, among other things, the differences between hearing and listening, empathy in a sales context, subtle nonverbal and verbal cues, and what constitutes listening behavior in sales. Manchester University regrets these omissions in the 2013 Celebrating Stewardship Contributions to Memorial and Endowed Funds in 2013: * The Wendell L. and Marcia L. Dilling Chemistry Scholarship Fund The world needs all kinds of talents, Temple Grandin told a capacity crowd March 6 at Cordier Auditorium. An expert in animal science, Grandin is best known for advancing society’s understanding of autism and for sharing her personal struggles and triumphs with the neural development disorder. Manchester named her its 2012-13 Innovator of the Year. When children are diagnosed with autism, we need to look at what they can do, Grandin said. “We spend too much time concerned about what kids can’t do.” There are undiagnosed people (with autism) all over Silicon Valley, and Einstein didn’t talk until he was 3, she added. Grandin is concerned that hands-on classes such as art, woodworking and mechanics are disappearing from schools. “We’re taking a very narrow view of education,” she said. “If you don’t expose kids to interesting things they don